Group Dynamics
Symposium
Thu, 23. April 2020, 10–18 h

Collectives of the Modernist Period
more information
Beijing, Buenos Aires, Bombay (today’s Mumbai), Casablanca, Khartoum, Kyoto, Lahore, Łódź, Nsukka, São Paulo, Tokyo: in the twentieth century, artists all over the world banded together in collectives. The tendency of like-minded individuals to work in groups and support each other is universal; yet the concerns pursued by these groups, their aesthetic methods, political objectives, and utopian visions, express themselves in widely diverse ways depending on the time and place. The exhibition "Group Dynamics—Collectives of the Modernist Period" examines selected examples to shed a light on the emergence and evolution of collectives and their engagement with the societies and cultures around them. The period under consideration in the presentation—from around 1910 to the 1980s—spans international modernization movements and anticolonial struggles for independence.
Groups are propelled by steadfast loyalties and irreconcilable ruptures. Their dynamic is unpredictable: collaboration, discussion, conviviality, rivalry, friendship, open-mindedness, inclusion, dissociation, weariness, controversy, love, polemics, and enthusiasm are characteristic features of the lives of groups. They provide us with one possible model for an understanding of art that is not grounded in the individual: art does not come into being in a vacuum, it grows out of exchanges of ideas and social interactions.
At the dawn of the twentieth century, many people enjoyed unprecedented mobility: artists struck up relationships with colleagues beyond the bounds of their cities and countries, groups sharpened their programs in solidarity with international developments—and, often, in opposition to traditional art academies and adversaries in their immediate vicinity. The founding of new art schools and collectives, the publication of programmatic writings or magazines were concomitants, but also engines of this phenomenon.
The modern era brought sustained changes of social structure: the world took on a more cosmopolitical cast, while class distinctions became entrenched. The modernist period marks a late culmination of European colonial rule, but also its demise in the form of struggles for liberation in many colonized parts of the world. In art and culture, the concept of modernism encompasses antithetical yet reinforcing tendencies such as the belief in progress and esotericism, a fetishistic embrace of technology and nature cults. Many artists and groups framed their own modernity as a radical program, a newfound resolve also reflected in numerous manifestos. The manifold resonances between the artists and works gathered in the exhibition yield a panoramic portrayal of dynamic synergy and antagonism, a complex international world in which art serves as a compass and a cause that sparks lively and boisterous exchanges of ideas.
Collectives represented in the exhibition:
Action, Tokyo
Artistas del Pueblo, Buenos Aires
Bombay Progressive Artists’ Group, Bombay (now Mumbai)
Casablanca School, Casablanca
Crystalists, Khartoum
"grupa a. r.", Łódź
Grupo dos Cinco, São Paulo
Khartoum School, Khartoum
Kokuga Sosaku Kyokai, Kyoto
Lahore Art Circle, Lahore
Martín Fierro, Buenos Aires
Mavo, Tokyo
Nsukka School, Nsukka
Wuming Huahui / No Name Group, Beijing
The project is supported by the German Federal Cultural Foundation as part of its program "Global Museum. Collections of the 20th Century from a Global Perspective". Concurrently on view is a second exhibition that opens in the spring of 2021 and is dedicated to the Blue Rider circle of artists: "Group Dynamics—The Blue Rider", Lenbachhaus, March 23, 2021–March 5, 2023.
Curators Lenbachhaus:
Karin Althaus, Susanne Böller, Sarah Louisa Henn, Dierk Höhne, Eva Huttenlauch, Matthias Mühling, Tanja Schomaker, Stephanie Weber
Experts and Authors:
Gen Adachi, Kanae Aoki, Patricia M. Artundo, Sergio Alberto Baur, Magalí Andrea Devés, Thiago Gil de Oliveira Virava, Salah Hassan, Yuko Ikeda, Samina Iqbal, Zehra Jumabhoy, Adam Langer, Liu Ding, Morad Montazami, Harper Montgomery, Noriko Murai, Daniel Muzyczuk, Lena Naumann, Iheanyi Onwuegbucha, Shogo Otani, Marcelo Rezende, Teresa Riccardi, Siegrun Salmanian, Nada Shabout, Nadine Siegert, Ijeoma Loren Uche-Okeke, Wang Aihe, Yinghua Lu Carol, Zamân Books & Curating
Cooperation Partners:
Beijing Inside-Out Art Museum
Iwalewahaus, University of Bayreuth
Muzeum Sztuki w Łodzi
Sharjah Art Foundation
Staatliche Kunstsammlung Dresden – Archiv der Avantgarden
The Asele Institute, Nimo
The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
Zamân Books & Curating
Publication:
With texts by Gen Adachi, Karin Althaus, Patricia M. Artundo, Sergio Alberto Baur, Susanne Böller, Magalí Andrea Devés, Thiago Gil de Oliveira Virava, Salah M. Hassan, Sarah Louisa Henn, Dierk Höhne, Eva Huttenlauch, Yuko Ikeda, Samina Iqbal, Zehra Jumabhoy, Adam Langer, Liu Ding, Carol Yinghua Lu, Noriko Murai, Daniel Muzyczuk, Iheanyi Onwuegbucha, Shogo Otani, Teresa Riccardi, Siegrun Salmanian, Tanja Schomaker, Nada Shabout, Nadine Siegert, Wang Aihe, Stephanie Weber. Design by magma design studio. Berlin: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2022. German / English, 448 p., 300 Ill. Price: 49 €
Additional Information:
The project "Group Dynamics"
"[...] Vieles in der bunten Exposition berührt einen menschlich. Das war auch ein Ziel der Präsenation, so Karin Althaus. Der einzelne Mensch sollte im Mittelpunkt stehen; natürlich erfahren wir aus den knappen Wandtexten etwas über die politischen und sozialen Umstände. Dennoch ist unsere Fantasie und Empathie immer gefordert. Da spalten sich Indien und Pakistan nach der Befreiung von der Kolonialherrschaft. Die 'Bombay Progressive Artists' Group' und der 'Lahore Art Circle' sind getrennt. Die Gemälde in diesem Lenbachhaus-Raum beweisen jedoch das Gegenteil: Nichts reißt die Kunst auseinander. Ein Glücksmoment durchflutet einen.
Noch rührender als die pakistanisch-indischen Brüder – es gibt tatsächlich ein solches malendes Paar – sind die Chinesinnen und Chinesen der 'Wuming Huahui / Gruppe ohne Namen'. Sie, Frauen und Männer, Alte und Junge, bezaubern durch duftige, anmutige kleine Bilder. Geleistet haben sie indes Riesiges. Sie hegten und pflegten ausdauernd, solidarisch und stets gefährdet unter dem Radar der extrem kunstfeindlichen Kulturrevolution insgeheim den Freiheitsschatz namens Malerei. Und uns wird plötzlich klar: In jedem einzelnen Ausstellungsraum ist dieser Schatz der Freiheit, der uns so selbstverständlich vorkommt, zu bewundern."
"Die Künstler mögen unterschiedlich gewesen sein, doch eine Erkenntnis einte alle: Als Gruppe sind wir stärker. Und so entstanden im 20. Jahrhundert weltweit zahlreiche Künstlerkollektive, unter ihnen der Blaue Reiter. Seit Frühjahr zeigt das Lenbachhaus im ersten Teil der Reihe 'Gruppendynamik' dessen Netzwerk und Einflüsse. Nun gibt das Museum zusätzlich einen schönen Einblick in die Beziehungsgeflechte einiger weltweiter Künstlergruppen des 20. Jahrhunderts, von Afrika über Asien bis Südamerika (hier die Grupo dos Cinco), in der Ausstellung 'Kollektive der Moderne'. Damit ist das ganze Haus sozusagen von Kopf bis Fuß auf Gruppendynamik eingestellt."