Works
by some fifty artists, from respected Bauhaus artists to spirited young
artists,are introduced from the Daimler Art Collection. Bringing together
works of art covering a variety of expressions, the exhibition spaces
display impressive installations.
The
major extraordinary feature of this project is that the whole exhibition
is introduced and accompanied by an "Education Program" for schools
and universities.
European Traditions
and Constructivist Art in dialogue with Contemporary Art
The exhibits
will specially be assembled and presented to give visitors a tour
of the last 100 years of international art history with a focus on
abstract tendencies, as a reference to the strong abstract-constructive
traditions in South America from 1950 to today.

Exhibition
view with works from Oskar Schlemmer, MaxBill, Johannes Itten, Willi
Baumeister
A starting point would be provided by Classical Modernism, with main
pieces of the Collection from the German Bauhaus, from Constructivism
and Concrete Art, with names like Oskar Schlemmer, Max Bill and Josef
Albers. Albers, whose biography was greatly shaped by study and teaching
at the German Bauhaus, emigrated to the USA in 1933, where he became
one of the leading figures in education. Willi Baumeister and Max
Bill, two other key artists of the Collection, both studied at the
German Bauhaus. Max Bill was the founder, spokesman and chief theorist
of the Zurich concrete school. Other representative names would be
Adolf Fleischmann, Jean Arp, Richard Paul Lohse and Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart.

Exhibition
view with works from Lothar Quinte, Josef Albers, Francois Morellet,
Video: Esther Hiepler. Foreground: Max Bill, Ulmer Hocker
European Zero Avant-garde
The second part
of the exhibition is dedicated to the Zero avant-garde.
This European movement is linked with artists like Heinz Mack, Enrico
Castellani, Dadamaino, Herbert Oehm, Christian Megert and Jan Henderikse.
Zero, founded by Heinz Mack and Otto Piene as an artists`
association in 1957 in Germany, became a European movement in the
1960s. By questioning the basis of artistic production, reception
and presentation in general the artists redefined the traditional
concept of the work of art radically, thus laying a foundation for
the Concept Art and Minimalism in Europe.

Exhibition
view with works from Jeremy Moon, Douwe jan Bakker, Katje Strunz, Mathieu
Mercier. Floor Sculpture: Liam Gilik
Minimalism Europe
and America
The major abstract
movements from the 1950s to the 1970s are characterized by going back
to the origins of concrete, constructive and minimalist art, though
with different stresses in Europe and America. Connections between
European structural-constructive painting and American tendencies
of minimalist art are represented by Charlotte Posenenske, Ulrich
Rueckriem and Franz Erhard Walther. Forerunners of this European Minimalism
are works by Josef Albers, Hermann Gloeckner or Camille Graeser shown
in the exhibition. American reductionist art is represented by Donald
Judd, Robert Ryman, Mathias Goeritz or John McLaughlin. Tendencies
of an international minimalism are currently developed by artists
like Liam Gillick, Katja Strunz or Andrea Zittel. Thus the exhibition
shows clearly that Minimalism is a characteristic trait in many works
by artists from different periods and nationalities.
Form, Line, Space
This section
of the exhibition brings together abstract avant-garde and contemporary
artists referring to different basic conceptual and formal elements
like the examination of "space" or the reduction to the
"line" as representational means. The exhibited works, including
the Raumplastik [Space Sculpture] by Norbert Kricke, will be linked
by a carpet designed by the contemporary Algerian artist Philippe
Parreno. These works enter in a dialogue with George Vantongerloo,
Josef Albers and Ben Willikens.
Car-related
Another focus
of the Daimler Art Collection is on commissioned works relating to
the product "car". In 1986, on the 100th anniversary of
the invention of the motor car, the car as a motif and icon of mobility
returned to Warhol's work with a commission from Daimler-Benz AG.
About 80 pictures were planned for the Cars series, but only 35 pictures
and twelve drawings were completed before he died in 1987. This complex
also provides a nucleus for other car-related work commissioned by
Daimler.
From 1995 to
1998 the American artist Robert Longo developed a series of five large-format
drawings for the Daimler Art Collection called Cars from Above, showing
top views of 1980s and 1990s models. This section will be completed
with other car-related sculptures, objects and videos by Sylvie Fleury,
Kirsten Mosher and Vincent Szarek.
Education Programme
A major extraordinary
feature of this project is that the whole exhibition will be introduced
and accompanied by an "Education Program" for schools and
universities. Learners and students are handed out a free book to
the exhibition: From Bauhaus to NOW. ABC of the Daimler Art Collection
(200 pages, color ill.) so that they can find their own way in to
20th century art. Mercedes-Benz Argentina will provide shuttle buses
to transport the school kids and students to the exhibition. Trainee
programs will be available for museum employees, teachers and students
in the exhibition's fit-up phase and can attract many individuals,
who are communicating the Education Programme to their audience.

Exhibition
view with works from Mathieu Mercier, Jo Baer, John Mc Laughlin, Kenneth
Noland, Daniel Buren, Eckard Schene, Andrea Zittel (Foreground)
> overview:
introduction and the further exhibition venues
>> Malba
website
Videos of the exhibition
on Youtube
>> TV
report
>> Catalog
of Art
>> Prennaouncement
Spot