Open 13.14.15. Nov from 17:00 to 20:00
Artweek guided tour 14. Nov from 17:00 bis 18:30
with
Aldo Giannotti
Alberto Storari
Alfredo Barsuglia
Andrea Heyer
Ania Zorn
Bea Rice Küninger
Brunilda Castejon
Casaluce Geiger
Charlotte Aurich
Christine Baumann
Christian Rupp
Christiane Spatt
Edith Payer
Elisabeth Grübl
eSeL (Esel Lorenz Seidler)
Francesca Centonze
Franziska King
Florent Souly
Gerald Straub
Gerald Zahn
Georg Eckmayr
Julia Bugram
Yomer
Hana Usui
Isabelle Seilern
Ilaria Carli Paris
Lisa Reiter
Linus Riepler
Klaus Taschler
Karin Maria Pfeifer
Michael Gumhold
Marianna Kotsan / Fi Do
Michikazu Matsune
Miriam Laussegger
Naoko Muneoka
Olaf Osten
Ona B
Oscar Cueto
Pablo Chiereghin
Peter Kraus
Peter Fritzenwallner
Roman Pfeffer
Rudolf Hübl
Camilla Lausch
Sandra Fockenberger
Sascha Alexandra Zaitseva
Sophie Dvořák
Stefan Wanka
Sula Zimmerberger
Torsten Köpf
Werner Schedler
ABOUT
10 Minutes Shift is a project in the form of a curated exhibition which challenges the relationship between time, work, production, and value. In a world where productivity often reigns supreme, this exhibition questions the conventional notions by inviting artists to present art pieces created in 10 minutes.
The exhibition interrogates the intrinsic worth of artistic production in a society fixated on commodification and consumption. By challenging the notion that value is contingent upon time spent, the exhibition invites to reassess the preconceptions about the economic and cultural valuation of art. Words like fair pay, freelancing, freedom, welfare, remain often just words in the everyday-life of artistic production.
The curated selection of artworks offers a diverse array of perspectives on the intersection of time, work, production, and value. From sketches to installations and actions, the artworks create a statement which transcends the limitations of the clock and the value that society gives to it. The spectators will be confronted with the ephemeral nature of artistic expression and the relentless march of time. “10 Minutes Shift” compels us to contemplate the fleeting moments and to reconsider the intrinsic value of creative work. In doing so, it invites to reframe the understanding of the relationship between time, work, production, and value in contemporary society.