AIL Ping-Pong #2: Sample
Showcase of artistic projects by Angewandte
alumni
Presented in the small vitrine of the Otto Wagner Postsparkasse, seven
graduates of the University of Applied Arts Vienna open a window into the diverse artistic practices and languages of Angewandte
alumni, offering a range of perspectives that explore parallels, contrasts, or extensions within the given thematic framework.
Intervention at Counter 13 with Hubert Blanz, Margareta Klose, Marlene Lahmer,
Rafael Lippuner, Mona Rith, Laura Stoll and Martin Veigl
In its second edition, AIL Ping-Pong circles around the
term and meaning of “sample.”
While in the natural sciences, samples are collected to enable analysis and investigation,
in music, the term “sample” refers to an excerpt from an existing recording that is integrated into a new composition. Similarly,
in the visual arts, samples may emerge throughout the creative process – whether through experimental methods, the appropriation
of external content, or the incorporation of elements from other disciplines, methodologies, or conceptual frameworks. Ideas,
materials, methods, or visuals can be sampled. A sample can thus represent transdisciplinary collaboration or reflect a dynamic,
exploratory process marked by iteration, testing, and discovery.
Hubert
Blanz graduated in 1999 from the Department of Sculpture (Bildhauerei). His artistic work deals primarily with urban
infrastructures, spatial grids, and geographical and virtual networks. Within this context, megacities have emerged as a central
theme: the rapid and constant development, the challenges and visions that accompany them, and the influence of these changes
on our coexistence. In addition to elements of the big city, networks from nature also serve as templates for large-format
collages and animations.
Margareta Klose explores topics of coexistence within a queer-feminist,
poetic practice. Her artistic work and research are situated at the intersection of fine arts, literature, education, knowledge
production, and memory – centered around painting, writing, computational photography, and objets trouvés. In her work, she
develops site-specific installations and performances that resemble cabinets of curiosities, scientific experimental settings,
and artists’ studios – or rather: alchemists’ kitchens. At the University of Applied Arts Vienna, she studied in the Department
of TransArts and graduated in 2020.
Marlene Lahmer’s work is material-based and takes the form
of sculptures, multimedia installations, and text performances. Literary and theory-informed approaches overlap translucently,
incongruently, and at times complementarily. One of her main focuses lies in the aesthetic and physical qualities of glass,
in the visual and auditory spaces found for texts, and in exploring concepts from cultural theory and linguistics. Lahmer
graduated in 2022 from the TransArts department.
Rafael Lippuner is an artist and exhibition designer
who employs the processes of assembling materials, installing, and managing as artistic practices. The means of presentation
are linked to the role of objects in terms of interaction and storytelling – especially in a time when images and symbols
displace language. His multimedia works sample and intervene in everyday situations, structures, and codes to retain a certain
wilderness in how we perceive our surroundings. In 2019, Lippuner graduated from the Department of Art & Science.
Mona Rith is a textile artist, who weaves abstract objects and explores the possibilities between fixed
structures and the limits of their dissolution. She plays with tension, shrinkage, and other material behaviors through weaving
techniques combined with the inherent properties of the materials used. With great curiosity, Rith observes and investigates
dependencies, interactions, and connections. She is an alumna of the Institute of Studies in Art and Art Education and graduated
in 2021.
Laura Stoll works in the fields of sculpture, installation, and performance. After earning
a degree in medicine in Berlin, she graduated from the University of Applied Arts Vienna in the Department of Art & Science
in 2021. In her projects, she operates at the intersection of medicine, psychology, and philosophy, applying individual methodologies
from these fields to her artistic practice. Using a variety of formats, she investigates questions of personal identity and
what constitutes our sense of being.
Martin Veigl is a painter, interested in the smallest gestures
and daily situations that convey social and historical codes and messages. Each found configuration can be seen as an unconscious,
natural, and authentic fragment of reality. His paintings often do not fill the entire canvas, are fragmentary in nature,
and suggest moments of memory. Veigl graduated from the Department of Painting in 2016.