An illustrated study of Hanne Darboven's masterwork, the massive
Kulturgeschichte 1880-1983 (Cultural History 1880-1983).
Hanne Darboven's Kulturgeschichte 1880-1983 (Cultural History 1880-1983)
(1980-1983) is an overwhelming and encyclopedic installation consisting
of 1,590 works on paper and 19 sculptural objects. The work weaves
together cultural, social, and historical references with
autobiographical documents, postcards, pinups of film and rock stars,
documentary references to the first and second world wars, geometric
diagrams for textile weaving, a sampling of New York doorways,
illustrated covers from news magazines, the contents of an exhibition
catalogue devoted to postwar European and American art, a kitschy
literary calendar, and extracts from some of Darboven's earlier works.
The panels are sequenced and grouped, with the groups then juxtaposed in
arrangements that often seem little more than chance associations. In
his illustrated walk through Darboven's massive work, Dan Adler explores
its visual and aesthetic complexities and considers the work in relation
to various projects undertaken by European artists in the
1960s--including Gerhard Richter's ongoing Atlas. The work is now
permanently installed at Dia: Beacon.