Throughout the year, exhibitions at the Schafhof present international and local positions in contemporary art. The spectrum includes all forms of visual arts, such as painting, video art, sculpture, photography, drawing, conceptual art, and installation. Group exhibitions with international and German artists, solo exhibitions with renowned artists and presentations of works by younger or regionally based artists take place in alternation. Applications are welcome.
Annual themes serve as common threads throughout the exhibition program, and facilitate an engagement with the exhibited works through a range of perspectives. A thematic emphasis also fosters a better understanding of art and a more enjoyable viewing experience. Certain themes emphasize formal aspects (for example, Color in 2013, Structure in 2015, and Sound in 2017), while others focus on specific concepts (for example Illusion in 2014, Identity in 2016, and Art and Science in 2019).
The Schafhof features a gallery on the ground floor and a large exhibition hall on the first floor, with a total exhibition space encompassing almost 450 square meters. The barrel vault ceiling and its unusual shape offer an atmosphere unique to the region and beyond.
27 August ‒ 9 October, 2016: Exhibition
opening hours: Tu ‒ Sa 2‒7 pm, Su + holidays 10 am‒7 pm The exhibition spaces and the café are accessible to the disabled.
26 August, Friday 7 pm: Exhibition OPENING
Shuttle bus from Freising Station to the House of Art: 6.30 ‒ 7 pm; return: 8.50 pm
The opening takes place together with the opening of the exhibition
Eszter Szabó: Double Take. ‒ Admission free!
24 September, Saturday 3 pm: Kunstclub 13
with Tatjana Utz and Eike Berg, director of the House of Art ‒
information and registration: www.kunstclub13.org ‒ attendance fee: 10 €
27 September, Tuesday 5 pm: meetingpoint+art
Guided tour through the exhibition with Alexandra M. Hoffmann ‒ Admission free!
1 October, Saturday 4 pm: KUNST#TAG 043 Science
Presentation by Prof. Dr. Barbara Vinken, LMU Munich, about fashion and gender, afterwards presentation of the catalogue Showtime ‒ Admission free!
With the kind support of:
Pictures: Marco Einfeldt
Working in watercolor, oil, film, and installation, Tatjana Utz offers rare insights into the backstage world of the stars of Munich drag queen performances, known as travesty shows.Her artistic documentation addresses gender roles and their social acceptance.
Her series Showtime documents the performances of Munich travesty stars (Gerda Gans, Marcella Milano, Chantal Gpunkt, Miss Piggy, Gene Pascale, Mandy Mitchell, and Juan Morales) and guest stars on their shows. She accompanied travesty performers with the camera backstage, from their preparations behind the curtain to their performances in glittering evening gowns. Over the course of an involved process that takes several hours these male performers transform into their female alter egos. The image series Showtime captures the various phases of this alteration in watercolors, oil paintings, linoleum prints, drawings, objects arranged in display cases, and an installation—and provides rare insights into the backstage world where the performers change clothes, put on padding to assume female form, apply makeup, style their wigs, and put on jewelry. Wearing feather boas, high heels, and sequined dresses, the travesty performers appear on stage in their alternate identity as women in glittering evening wear.
Travesti, a stage performance by actors playing the opposite sex, has existed since the theater of antiquity, in which female roles were played by men. Largely due to the objections of the church, it was not until the 16th century that there is evidence of female actresses being used for female roles in the German-speaking world. In Elizabethan theater in England female parts were played by young boys, and during the time of Louis the XIV the female parts in French ballet were played by men “en travestie.” In contrast, in the second half of the 19th century “danseuses en travestie” assumed male parts. The term travesti or “travesty” has taken on new meanings, and in the context of drag queen shows it includes a repertoire [a3] ranging from the imitations of stars to the creation of unique stage personae (such as Gerda Gans, Marcella Milano, Chantal Gpunkt, Miss Piggy, Gene Pascale, Mandy Mitchell, and Juan Morales).
The series Showtime addresses current gender issues. Travesty performers take on a new guise by utterly changing their external appearance, and after transforming into their alter ego they then embody an entirely different personality. The freedom of being able to do this is enabled by the underlying values of our society. However, this attitude and lifestyle are still not widely accepted. Reactions to this practice reveal the degree of a society’s openness.
In conjunction with this project the Italian-Argentine documentary filmmaker Maiu Olivero produced a short film, which shows Tatjana Utz’s working processes in the studio, documents views of the exhibition project Showtime, takes a look at the wardrobes of travesty performers, and shows excerpts of their performances. The film will be screened during the exhibition.
The project is accompanied by a catalogue published by hesperus print* Verlag Dresden.
Additional works by the artist can be viewed online at www.tatjana-utz.de.
In her series and installations Tatjana Utz tests the boundaries and possibilities of representative painting and drawing. In addition to working on canvas, she transforms classical media into the three-dimensional as display cases of objects, walk-through books, or painted sculptures. Through the layering of multiple images her watercolors take on a three-dimensional quality. Through the use of life-size cutouts her oil paintings shift from being mere figures to becoming sculptures. Walls function as the oversize pages of a book. The artist foregrounds socially relevant issues, socio-cultural questions, and historical approaches, which she researches extensively in advance. She often works from interviews, which she integrates into her work as text collages. The themes of identity and individuality are common threads running through her work, and the viewer is consistently drawn into her installations, thus becoming part of the work.
Tatjana Utz always works in series. She produces connected groups of works that are generally narrative in character. Working from a clearly defined concept, she distills a multi-part installation out of her working process, which can be shown as a whole or in segments. One could describe her approach as conceptual painting, although she works in classical techniques, such as oil and acrylic paint, drawing, and printing processes such as linoleum cut and etching.Tatjana Utz was born in Sternberg in 1975, she lives and works in München.
www.tatjana-utz.de.
Solo exhibitions (selection)