Skip to main content
Künstlerhaus – Halle für Kunst & Medien. Heribert Friedl
05May
News

Künstlerhaus – Halle für Kunst & Medien. Heribert Friedl

In the site-specific works of art that the artist Heribert Friedl (*1969 Feldbach, lives in Vienna) made for his exhibition at the Künstlerhaus – Halle für Kunst & Medien there is little to see—because Friedl believes that the visual allure that’s generally crucial to viewing art has worn thin. Most art that is designed from the outset to provide a stirring visual experience takes too long, is too intense and too charged. Friedl’s practice of art is based on substantial historical research and the particular qualities of each exhibition site. For the Künstlerhaus he’s developed a sound installation whose starting point is its location in the middle of the Graz City Park. Especially with the coming of spring (and mating season), the area is swarming with native birds that begin drawing attention to themselves with their individual birdsongs at dawn. Friedl’s recorded compositions, played on handmade instruments, are subtly integrated into the birds’ concert and turn out to be additional sounds that occasionally provide surprising moments. It’s difficult for laypeople to distinguish the instrumental sounds from the natural birdsong. Yet, because a bird concert is precisely timed according to the (bird) clock, Friedl’s compositions subvert the natural order.

 

 

Since 1996 Friedl’s been using the term “nonvisualobjects” to identify the results of his non-material artistic practice. He and the artist Raphael Moser have also operated a label known as “nvo | nonvisualobjects” since 2005, which releases interpretations of Minimalist music. Friedl, however, has become known chiefly for his “aromatic” works of art, which are based on the scientific fact that we remember visual experiences better when we combine them with certain scents. In a new work made especially for the staircase inside the Künstlerhaus Friedl combines a historical event with an olfactory experience. The artist used aromatic materials to write the date 1952—the year the Künstlerhaus opened—along the staircase. The scents assigned to each numeral are employed associatively, meaning speculatively, and are connected to the exhibition space through this. Even though the artist did not want to identify the smells, they nevertheless function as a link between the place and its visitors. And because all of the aromatic notes don’t completely unfold until the treated surface is rubbed, this piece supplements the olfactory experience with a tactile one—along with a nod to institutional critique.

 


The exhibition’s title “Als ich den Finger aus dem gefiederten Po zog, hat es wahnsinnig angenehm nach frischem Lehm gerochen” (When I took my finger out of the feathered bottom, it smelled insanely good, like fresh clay) takes the sound installation and the birdsong outdoors and connects them to the aromatic piece of art inside the Künstlerhaus. What they have in common is that they both evoke images in the mind. In this way Heribert Friedl concentrates his practice on a radical form of art: the imaginary image.

 


Heribert Friedl (*1969, Feldbach) received his diploma at the University of Applied Arts with distinction in 1998. He was awarded with prices such as the Förderungspreis für bildende Kunst in der Steiermark (1999), the 31. Österreichischer Graphikwettbewerb (2009), the Universalmuseum Joanneum Preis (2010) and from the 33. Österreichischer Graphikwettbewerb (2013). nvo | nonvisualobjects, nonvisualobjects.com

 

 

06-05-
11-06-2017

 

Special opening hours on 05.05.2017: 10 am - 11 pm
Free shuttle service Vienna – Graz – Vienna on 05.05.2017
Departure Vienna: 3 pm, Opernring 1/ bus stop 59 A
Departure Graz: 10:30 pm, Burgring, 8010 Graz
Reservations under: info@galerientage-graz.at