Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website RAIMUND ABRAHAM exhibition 'ANGLES AND ANGELS. DRAWINGS MODELS PROTOTYPES' at Mak Museum is closed at least until April 19
march 31, 2020 - MAK Museum

RAIMUND ABRAHAM exhibition 'ANGLES AND ANGELS. DRAWINGS MODELS PROTOTYPES' at Mak Museum is closed at least until April 19

MAK temporarily closed

 

Wed, 11.03.2020 8.00 am –Sun, 19.04.2020

MAK – Museum of Applied Arts

 

Dear visitors,

 

As a measure to contain the coronavirus, the MAK will remain closed at least until 19 April 2020.

 

The MAK is following an urgent recommendation of the Federal Ministry of Art, Culture, Civil Service and Sport to all federal museums.

 

Online tickets already purchased will be refunded.

 

Mak.at

RAIMUND ABRAHAM

ANGLES AND ANGELS. DRAWINGS MODELS PROTOTYPES

 

Wed, 25.03.2020–Sun, 19.07.2020

MAK – Museum of Applied Arts

 

The Austrian-American architect #raimundabraham (1933–2010) saw architecture in close connection with art, philosophy, literature, and film—an ideational interaction highlighted in the current MAK exhibition. The exhibition title, Angles and Angels, is a play on words, one that can be interpreted as conceptual and poetic. In his manifesto EYES DIGGING (New York, 2001), Abraham sketches his exploratory approach to architecture and the importance of visionary writers, philosophers, poets, theorists, and composers such as Stéphane Mallarmé, James Joyce, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Arnold Schönberg to his architectural practice.

 

Structural, archetypal, and neo-futuristic basic shapes characterize Raimund Abraham’s designs and buildings. In the early 1960s, he was part of Vienna’s avant-garde scene, along with Hans Hollein, Walter Pichler, Hermann Nitsch, and Peter Kubelka. Initial drawings and collages for visionary spaces, architecture, and utopian city models were created. Abraham’s international network involved partnerships with Vito Acconci, Peter Eisenman, and Lebbeus Woods, among others, and he was a close friend of film director Jonas Mekas, who portrayed him in his film Scenes from the Life of #raimundabraham (2013).

 

Abraham himself spoke of “imaginary architecture,” (unrealized) “projects,” and “executed buildings.” Based on his drawings as a stimulus for thought and the storyline of his architectural creations, the MAK exhibition uses collages, models, and furnishings prototypes to showcase Abraham’s designs, projects, and architectural achievements, which explore the conflicting interplay between the individual and sociopolitical challenges of his time.

 

Curator: Bärbel Vischer, Curator, MAK #contemporaryart Collection