Utopia
The Right to Hope
Infos
We are currently experiencing an unprecedented period of polycrisis on a global scale: In addition to wars, pandemics, and a growing loss of faith in democracies, the man-made climate catastrophe dominates the thoughts and actions of many. Beyond cynicism and apocalyptic mood, however, it should be possible to live together in solidarity and community as a basis for civilizational and ecological survival. In the first two decades of the twenty-first century, it is primarily artists who take up such ideas in their works and advance the discourse on possible utopias.
The exhibition and publication project Utopia. The Right to Hope, initiated by the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, aims to give a sign of hope and confidence that a better and fairer life can be achieved for everyone on this planet. The aim is not to create a new grand design for the world, but rather to focus on a variety of micro-utopias that, when combined, can achieve something positive. For this reason, Utopia focuses primarily on works of art, but also on architectural projects, design objects, and examples from the applied arts that present utopian projects or ideas in various media. In addition to the critical examination of the concept of utopia itself and its promising but also totalitarian implications, Utopia focuses on projects that aim at small-scale change, including activist or practice-oriented fields of action. The various works and objects can offer suggestions on different levels for a more just and sustainable coexistence that takes into account marginalized social groups as well as animate and inanimate nature. In this context, art in particular can make groundbreaking contributions to utopian models for the future, as it has critically accompanied social processes with its palette of aesthetic and thematic means since the dawn of the modern era. This permanent critique of the status quo entitles art, more than any other cultural form, to utopia.
An academic advisory board with members from various fields supported the preparation phase of the exhibition. The exhibition project Utopia. The Right to Hope will be accompanied by a transdisciplinary publication with texts from the fields of art history, philosophy, ecology, sociology, law, architecture, history, and politics, including contributions by the following authors: Inke Arns, Andreas Beitin, Friedrich von Borries, Dagmar Fink, Lisa Garforth, Jörg Heiser, Jakob Huber, Wolfgang Kaleck, Sebastian Mühl, Ludger Schwarte, Stefan Sorgner, Maristella Svampa, Tilo Wesche, and Kerstin Wolff. Cooperation partners at local, national, and international level, as well as an extensive educational and support program, ensure the best possible networking and dissemination of the contents of Utopia. The Right to Hope.
Idea / Concept: Andreas Beitin
Curatorial Team: Andreas Beitin, Sebastian Mühl, Dino Steinhof
Curatorial Assistant: Veronika Mehlhart
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