Oliver Ressler: We Have a Situation Here.

www.prenningergespraeche.at

The exhibition, 'We Have a Situation Here', gathers a series of posters, 
photographs and films that Oliver Ressler has created in recent years. 
It provides an insight into the different strands and strategies of 
Ressler's artistic work. His exhibitions, projects in public spaces, 
films, lectures, books and curated exhibitions refer to issues such as 
the economy, democracy, forms of resistance, social alternatives, racism 
and global warming. Ressler's position is always critical. 'Like other 
artists who seek to engage directly with the political sphere, Ressler 
approaches aesthetics practically, as a set of tools for getting the job 
done. To that end, his work may one day consist of posters and videos, 
another day involve architecturally contingent visual elements, and 
another day make use of organizational and pedagogical situations to 
open up public discussion and debate. [...] Ressler's claim of moving 
back and forth between different spaces combining fiction and 
non-fiction underscores the danger artists can represent to the order of 
things,' writes Gregory Sholette. Marco Scotini adds: 'Ressler is one of 
the new generation of artists operating in the 'gray area' that exists 
between art and politics, who develop projects on a variety of social 
themes using different media. But what particularly distinguishes 
Ressler's work compared to others and has led to his international 
renown is the role of policy activist he assumes through his documentary 
and social inquiries, through the production of slogans and publicizing 
campaigns that serve many and various types of political agitation and 
social conflict, and finally through conferences, publications, 
counter-information campaigns and exhibitions that gather together the 
results of his investigations.'

The exhibition in Prenning combines photographs from the series 
'Globalizing Protest' (since 2004) and 'We Have a Situation Here' (2011) 
and posters and billboards that were originally posted in different 
contexts in cities such as Amsterdam, Graz, Karlsruhe and Linz. This 
work is complemented by a video archive that offers viewing of the 
eleven films produced by Ressler since 2000. Among them are three films 
that deal with the so-called anti-globalization movement and three films 
about the political processes in Venezuela.


Oliver Ressler, born 1970 in Knittelfeld, lives and works in Vienna. His 
projects have been in solo exhibitions at the Berkeley Art Museum, USA; 
Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center, Istanbul; Museum of 
Contemporary Art, Belgrade; Kunstraum at the University of Lüneburg; 
Centro Cultural Conde Duque, Madrid and the Alexandria Contemporary Arts 
Forum, Egypt. Ressler has participated in more than 200 group 
exhibitions, including the MASSMoCA, USA; Itaucultural Institute, Sao 
Paulo; National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens; CAAC, Sevilla; Van 
Abbe Museum, Eindhoven and at the biennials in Prague, Seville, Moscow, 
Taipei, Lyon and in the 4th Young Artists' Biennial in Bucharest. For 
the Taipei Biennale 2008, Ressler curated an exhibition on the 
anti-globalization movement, 'A World Where Many Worlds Fit', which was 
also installed in 2010 in the Foreman Art Gallery of Bishop University, 
Sherbrooke, Canada. His book 'Alternative Economics, Alternative 
Societies' was published by the Wyspa Institute of Art, Gdansk in 2007.
www.ressler.at
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