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Kunsthalle Wien Opens Antonio Riello. Flaktürme Down |
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Antonio Riello, "Flaktürme down", (detail) © der Künstler/the artist.
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VIENNA, AUSTRIA.- Kunsthalle Wien presents Antonio Riello. Flaktürme down, on view through April 10, 2005. The game of antagonisms appeals greatly to Italian artist Antonio Riello. He challenges his chosen themes by using conscious discrepancies between material and subject, form and content. For the exhibition Flaktürme down at the project space, Riello has constructed scale models (1 20) of four of Viennas six World War II flak towers from 1,000 kilos of sugar cubes. Visitors to the exhibition are given carte blanche to demolish this sweet variant on fascist war achitecture and take chunks home as mementos. Two generations after National Socialism, these monumental utilitarian structures remain fixtures of Viennas peace time urban landscape, but by dismantling their sugary guise piece by piece, they will be reduced to the pitiful fate of mere souvenirs.
Antonio Riello explains that he felt impelled towards the idea for this exhibition through his strong conviction that art can act as a social liberation from the past: My work is intended as a gift to the long suffering people of Vienna who have had to tolerate the presence of these bleak fear inspiring witnesses of an obscure past in the parks and gardens of their city. Rather like those Parisians who witnessed the storming of the Bastille or the people of Berlin during the fall of the Wall, I like to think that the Viennese will now have the opportunity to demolish these symbols of evil through an art event of a collective nature.
During the Second World War, the Nazis erected six military towers throughout the city. Made of steel reinforced concrete, they were used as bunkers for the civil population and equipped with anti aircraft guns trained on Allied bombers. For years the authorities have considered ways of demolishing the flak towers. At the project space, Antonio Riello will unleash a work of ironic annihilation of this symbol of total war. Using over 1,000 kilos of sugar cubes, he creates detailed reproductions of the towers which will then be slowly taken apart by means of a slow yet inexorable breakdown. Visitors may take away the broken pieces as souvenirs.
The exhibition was curated by Gerald Matt. Antonio Riello was born in 1958. He lives and works in Maróstica (Italy) and Amsterdam. In occasion of the exhibition a catalogue will be published in German/English with essays by Gerald Matt and Marion Piffer.
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