Bündner Kunstmuseum
Postplatz
CH–7000 Chur
Tel. ++41 81 257 28 68
Fax ++41 81 257 21 72
E-mail: info(at)bkm.gr.ch
Öffnungszeiten
Montag geschlossen
Di–So 10–17 Uhr
Donnerstag 10–20 Uhr

Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur, May 26 to August 26, 2012
André Thomkins belongs to the most versatile Swiss artists of the 20th century. One of his most self-willed inventions is the Lackskins: A way of painting with liquid paint on water. The Bündner Kunstmuseum is devoting this body of work a comprehensive exhibition and opens up a new approach to this fascinating œuvre.
André Thomkins (1930-1985) is known as a superb draughtsman and word artist. Like no other he mastered all the classical image media. At the same time, however, he also experimented with different techniques and materials. In the middle 1950s, for example, he developed his Lackskins, in which he painted and drew on water with lacquer paint, and created pictures of enormous imaginative impact. The lacquer falls as drops or runs in a string onto the water and forms a skin, which continuously changes and at the same time can be manipulated. At a certain point Thomkins fixed the movement by lifting off the floating image onto a piece of paper. In this way the Lackskins offer themselves to both chance and artistic exploration. They require patience and willingness on the part of both the artist and the viewer, to take in the play of forms created by the paint and to discover the rich world of images therein.
With his Lackskins André Thomkins drew on old techniques such as the manufacture of marble paper and then expanded on these. During the heyday of abstract painting he concurrently found his own way and created links to the discussions among the artistic avant-garde of his time. For the first time ever, this magnificent body of work is shown in a comprehensive way in an exhibition. It reveals the surprisingly numerous facets of André Thomkins’ art and opens up a new approach to this fascinating œuvre. “Seen geographically”, said André Thomkins, “Lackskin floats just off the land of milk and honey…”
The exhibition is being organised in collaboration with the estate of the artist at the Kunstmuseum Lichtenstein, where a large Thomkins-retrospective is being prepared for 2013.
Stephan Kunz, Director Bündner Kunstmuseum
Opening
Friday, May 24, 2012, at 6 pm
Reception and Introduction: Stephan Kunz, Director Bündner Kunstmuseum
Catalogue
André Thomkins. Lackskins, edited by Stephan Kunz and Dagmar Streckel, with an introduction by Stephan Kunz and texts by André Thomkins, Daniel Spoerri and Carlheinz Caspari, Scheidegger & Spiess, 2012, 160 pages, approx. 110 illustrations in colour, CHF 35.-/CHF 30.- for BKV members.
Public Tours
On Thursdays, May 31, June 7 (followed by concert), June 14 (followed by concert), July 12, August 16, August 23, at 6 pm respectively
Language and Music – Special Events as Part of the Exhibition of André Thomkins
Thursday, June 7, at 7 pm
Palindrome und Trümpi, reading and concert by and with ANTON BRUHIN
Thursday, June 14, at 7 pm
Reading and concert by and with EDU HAUBENSAK
Der blaue Himmel (poems)
Three Timpani (composition for three kettledrums and various percussion instruments). Martin Lorenz, drums
Children’s Workshops
WORKSHOP I: For children ages 6-8, June 6, 2 pm to 4 pm
WORKSHOP II: For children ages 9-12, June 20, 2 pm to 4 pm
ATELIER RUMANTSCH: ils 27 da zercladur, da las 14 fin las 16
Introduction for Teachers
June 6, 5 pm to 7 pm, registration required
Platznot – Platzwechsel
Die Sammlung in Bewegung
Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur, 24. September bis 20. November 2011
Die Sammlung des Bündner Kunstmuseums braucht mehr Platz. Jedes Jahr wächst sie durchschnittlich um 150 Objekte an und zurzeit können nur rund 3% des Gesamtbestandes ständig gezeigt werden. Die aktuelle Ausstellung unterstreicht mit ungewöhnlichen Inszenierungen und selten gezeigten Werken die Notwendigkeit der geplanten baulichen Erweiterung.
Für einmal stellen wir sämtliche Räume des Hauses ausschliesslich der Sammlung zur Verfügung. Dabei holen wir nicht nur im Depot lagernde Schätze ans Licht, sondern greifen auch in die permanente Präsentation ein. In der historischen Villa Planta, die traditionellerweise der Sammlungspräsentation vorbehalten ist, verlassen Meisterwerke ihren angestammten Platz und tauchen im Sinn des „Platzwechsels“ in neuen Zusammenhängen auf. Die entstehenden Lücken bieten Raum für bisher nicht gezeigte Arbeiten, die formal, inhaltlich und medial überraschende Dialoge schaffen: Zilla Leutenegger trifft auf Angelika Kauffmann, Giovanni Giacometti auf Gerber/Bardill, Otto Dix auf Helmut Federle.
Für die Wechselausstellungsräume wurden die Depots durchforstet, um auch auf die hohe Qualität der selten gezeigten Arbeiten aufmerksam zu machen. Die zunehmende „Platznot“ wird darüber hinaus durch unterschiedliche Präsentationsweisen visualisiert. Überbordende Hängungen und Berge von Skulpturen wechseln sich mit reduzierten Inszenierungen einzelner Themen oder Werke ab. Der älteste Kupferstich in dieser Ausstellung stammt von 1642, das jüngste Video von 2009.
Das Konzept der Publikation spiegelt einerseits die Platznot visualisierenden Anhäufungen und die thematischen Gruppierungen in der Ausstellung wieder, anderseits die dialogischen Gegenüberstellungen, die aufgrund der vorgenommenen Platzwechsel entstehen. Gleichzeitig geht die Publikation über die Ausstellung hinaus, indem sie einen Gesamteindruck der Sammlung vermittelt mit der Auflistung sämtlicher Namen der rund 845 Künstlerinnen und Künstler, die heute darin vertreten sind. So bildet die Publikation das Bindeglied zwischen Ausstellung und der zeitgleich zugänglich gemachten Online Sammlung.
Neu: Sammlung Online
Zur Ausstellungseröffnung wird die Sammlung des Bündner Kunstmuseums mit über 6000 Objekten online geschaltet. So wird erstmals die ganze Sammlung auf zeitgemässe Weise zugänglich gemacht, was sowohl der interessierten Öffentlichkeit als auch der kunstwissenschaftlichen Forschung und Museumsarbeit zugutekommt.
Die Ausstellung, die Publikation und die Online Sammlung verfolgen mit unterschiedlichen Mitteln dasselbe Ziel: Die enorme Vielfalt der Sammlung zu inszenieren und für die Allgemeinheit qualitativ und quantitativ offen zu legen und überprüfbar zu machen.
Katharina Ammann
Vernissage
Freitag, 23. September, 19.00
Begrüssung: Dr. Beat Stutzer, Direktor Bündner Kunstmuseum
Einführung: Dr. Katharina Ammann, Konservatorin Bündner Kunstmuseum
Öffentliche Führungen
Jeweils donnerstags um 12.30 bis 13.30 Uhr
29. September und 13. Oktober, mit Nicole Seeberger, Co-Kuratorin
27. Oktober und 17. November, mit Katharina Ammann, Kuratorin
Kunst zum Mittag
Jeweils donnerstags um 12.30 bis 13 Uhr
15. September, 6. und 20. Oktober, 3. November
Konzert
Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden, Bernina Quartett
15. Oktober, 20 Uhr
Langer Samstag
Kurzführungen, Kinderprogramme, Konzerte
12. November, 12 – 24 Uhr
Einführung für Lehrpersonen
28. September, 17 bis 19 Uhr
Kinderatelier I
Für Kinder von 6 – 8 Jahren
5. Oktober, 14 bis 16 Uhr
Kinderatelier II
Für Kinder von 9 – 12 Jahren
26. Oktober, 14 bis 16 Uhr
Atelier rumantsch
ils 2 da november, da las 14 fin las 16
Ausstellungs- und Sammlungskatalog
Platznot – Platzwechsel. Die Sammlung in Bewegung, mit Texten von Katharina Ammann, Nicole Seeberger, gestaltet von Büro 146, Zürich, ca. 150 Abbildungen, 128 Seiten, Schriften zur Bündner Kunstsammlung 5, 2011
Sammlung Online
Zur Ausstellungseröffnung wird die Sammlung des Bündner Kunstmuseums mit rund 6000 Objekten online geschaltet: www.buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Das Bündner Kunstmuseum dankt für die grosszügige Unterstützung
Ernst Göhner Stiftung
Avina Stiftung
Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur, May 21 to September 4, 2011
The image we have of the artist Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966), is essentially influenced and determined by numerous photographers. The exhibition catalogues, publications, and books about the artist, which have appeared up to date in sheer endless numbers, nearly always contain photographic portraits of the artist or photos, which show him in his studio, at work or with his wife Annette, his brother Diego, with friends and acquaintances. The countless photos, which were taken mainly in the 1950s and early 1960s of Alberto Giacometti and his studio, all testify to the fascination, which the artist and his immediate working environment had for others.
Towards the end of the year 2008 a private collector offered the Bündner Kunstmuseum two portfolios with loosely inserted photos as well as a series of drawings by Alberto Giacometti. The hitherto unknown material consists of unseen to date, largely unpublished documentary photos – fascinating, highly revealing artistic items. The offer was made explicitly with the intention and the wish, that the assemblage should remain as a whole and find a permanent place at the art museum of Alberto Giacometti’s native canton. In search of financing an offer came from the businessman Remo Stoffel, who had previously already agreed to get involved culturally and to support the Bündner Kunstmuseum as the opportunity arose. Thus Remo Stoffel acquired the artistic material and left it to the Bündner Kunstmuseum as a long-term deposit. In this way the Giacometti stock of the Bündner Kunstmuseum is supplemented and newly accentuated in an unusual but striking way.
The photos by different well-known as well as unknown photographers – among others Kurt Blum, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Loomis Dean, Robert Doisneau, Douglas Glass, Alexander Liberman, Herbert Matter, Gordon Parks, Man Ray, Jean-Régis Roustan, Ernst Scheidegger – show the artist at work in his studios in Paris or in Stampa and Maloja, in the urban environment of Montparnasse or in the rural area of the Bergell. They offer insight into the deserted studio as well as Alberto Giacometti’s works. Some rather private photographs also tell of the deep affection between the married couple Alberto and Annette.
The existence of this extraordinary assemblage adds new facets to the familiar conceptions, and in part throws a surprising light on Alberto Giacometti, which in places puts into perspective the picture so far held of the famous painter and sculptor.
In the exhibition at the Bündner Kunstmuseum in Chur these photographs and drawings enter into an enlightening dialogue with the carefully chosen, outstanding sculptures and paintings from museum collections and private owners.
Opening
Friday, May 20, 7 pm
Guided Tours
Public tours on Thursdays, June 16, 23, and 30; July 7 and 21; August 11 and 18, always from 12.30 – 1.30 pm
Private tours and events for groups, firms, clubs, etc., on request
Publication
The Unseen Alberto Giacometti with contributions by Katharina Ammann, Dieter Koepplin, Nicole Seeberger, Beat Stutzer and Gabriella Zinke, 256 pages, approx. 180 illustrations, 22 x 28 cm, Verlag Scheidegger & Spiess, Zürich 2011, CHF 49.- / CHF 40.- for BKV members (editions in German and English)
Book Presentation
Über Giacometti reden. Begegnungen mit Eberhard W. Kornfeld und Ernst Scheidegger, in the presence of the author Renato Bergamin and the contemporary witnesses Kornfeld and Scheidegger, Tuesday, May 31, 7 pm.
Art at Lunchtime
Art appreciation on Thursdays, May 26 and June 9, 12.30 – 1 pm, of works by Alberto Giacometti, with Beat Stutzer
Open Discussion
Künstler vor der Kamera. Zwischen Mythos und Dokumentation
As part of FOTO SZENE GR professionals and photographers discuss the artist portrait in photography. Organised by Katharina Ammann and Nicole Seeberger, Thursday, September 1, at 6.30 pm
Museum Education
Introduction for teachers: June 8, from 5 to 7 pm.
Registration required
Workshop I: For children from 6 – 8 years, June 8, from 2 to 4 pm
Atelier rumantsch: ils 15 da zercladur, da las 14 fin las 16
Workshop II: For children from 9 – 12 years, June 22, from 2 to 4pm
With the Support of:
Graubündner Kantonalbank
Kulturförderung des Kantons Graubünden
Boner Stiftung für Kunst und Kultur
STOFFELpart
Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur, February 19 to May 1 2011
Two extraordinary protagonists from Graubünden: Lenz Klotz and Matias Spescha, both born in 1925, are of the few Swiss artists who, in an independent manner, concerned themselves with Abstract Expressionism during the 1950s and early 1960s. At a time when new non-figurativeness was treated with massive hostility and as «smeariness» saw itself confronted with the worst possible defamation, the courageous overcoming of hampering traditions and the gamble of setting forth to unknown shores truly had something heroic.
Lenz Klotz and Matias Spescha have made highly independent, extraordinary contributions to new non-figurative painting. The exhibition devotes itself to the fulminant early work of the two great artists and makes an important contribution to the current acceptance of Abstract Expressionism. The closely held dialogue between the two pictorial languages is especially elucidating, since both positions and intentions by Lenz Klotz and Matias Spescha within non-figurative painting could hardly be more opposed. Their main works and a carefully chosen representative selection portray and impart the important contributions of Klotz and Spescha.
Beat Stutzer
Opening
Friday, February 18, at 7 pm
Exhibition
February 19 to May 1 2011. Tuesday to Sunday 10 am to 5 pm, closed Monday
Public Tours
On Thursdays, February 24, March 10, 17 and 31, at 12.30 to 1.30 pm, with Dr. Beat Stutzer.
Publication
Die heroischen Jahre. Lenz Klotz und Matias Spescha, with texts by Beat Stutzer, 72 pages, 83 illustrations, 57 in colour, CHF 28.- / CHF 20.- for BKV members.
Line and Plane
Museum education tours for all school levels on Wednesdays and Thursdays. Booking required. alexa.giger(at)bkm.gr.ch or 081 257 28 72
Children’s Workshops
Matias Spescha: the plane and Lenz Klotz: the line. In the exhibition we discover what both these artists created with their pictorial language.
Workshop I: For children 6-8 years, March 23, 2011, from 2 pm to 4 pm
Workshop II: For children 9-12 years, March 30, 2011, from 2 pm to 4 pm
Atelier rumantsch: ils 6 d’avrigl 2011, da las 14 fin las 16
The exhibition and publication were made possible thanks to contributions from: