Lehrende geben einen Einblick in ihre aktuelle künstlerische Forschung
Lecturers give insight into their current artistic research


  • Untergrund II

    Untergrund II

    Lecture performance by Katrin Hornek

    within the workshop
    The Anthropocene: Challenging the Disciplines

    Sky Lounge
    hosted by the Vienna Anthropocene Network
    University Vienna

    Oskar-Morgenstern-Platz 1 
    1010 Vienna

    2019 April 08 / 09:00

    Date: April 8, 2019; 16:30–16:45
    Workshop duration: 09:00–17:30 

    Workshop with contributions by:
    Eva Horn, Michael Wagreich, Colin Waters, Matt Edgeworth, Jürgen Renn, Manfred Laubichler, Christoph Rosol, Katrin Hornek, Franz Mauelshagen, Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzik

     


  • The Anthropo-cene Surge

    The Anthropo-cene Surge

    Artistic research project

    Katrin Hornek (University of Applied Arts) in cooperation with the geologist Michael Wagreich (University of Vienna)
    Jan 01, 2018 – Dec 31, 2021

    January 2018

    Über 4 Jahre hinweg entwickelt die Künstlerin Katrin Hornek gemeinsam mit Michael Wagreich – einem Mitglied der Anthropozän-Arbeitsgruppe – ein interdisziplinäres Projekt, das den Wiener Untergrund kartiert, quantifiziert und kontextualisiert. Das Projekt ist an der Abteilung für Ortsbezogene Kunst angesiedelt und entwickelt zugleich unterschiedliche Formate des Austausches zwischen künstlerischer Forschung, Praxis und Lehre. 

     

    Over the course of four years, the artist Katrin Hornek cooperates with Michael Wagreich, a member of the Anthropocene working group, in order to develop an interdisciplinary project that maps, quantifies and contextualises the Viennese underground. The project is based at the Department of Site-Specific Art and aims to develop different formats of exchange between artistic research, practice and teaching.

     


  • I dance alone

    I dance alone

    Artistic research project

    PhD project by Bogomir Doringer
    Tutor: Paul Petritsch
    Oct 01, 2017 – Jun 30, 2020

    October 2017

    Bogomir Doringer’s long term ongoing research project, ‘I Dance Alone’, uses bird’s eye view documentation of dance parties to investigate clubbing as an organism. Through the use of artistic and scientific methods in recording and describing dance notations, ‘I Dance Alone’ endeavours to give us a new understanding and imagery of collectivism versus individualism in contemporary society. Can we understand clubbing as a living system, regulating and stabilizing the state and function of the collective and the individual in regard to a changing society?