The Way of the Water
An art parcours in collaboration with the Traisen and the MühlbachYou can see the locations of the artworks on Google Maps.
Description
For Tangente festival, Joanna Warsza, curator for fine arts, and Lorena Moreno Vera, associated curator for fine arts, are developing an exhibition in collaboration with the river. From 1 May to 6 October, the work of twentythree artists can be seen along the waters of St. Pölten.
You can see the locations of the artworks on Google Maps.
Guided walks with art educators
Every Fri, Sat, Sun and public holiday at 4 pm
The extensive route of the art trail through the city is divided into four shorter tours, each of which can be completed in around 90 minutes.
Bike tours
Every Sunday and public holiday at 2 pm
In addition to the guided walks, the art parcours can also be explored by bike.
The existence of all living organisms depends on water. When we drink a glass of water, this water flows through us back into the world. With every sip, we enter into a cross-species exchange with various living beings, but also with meteorological, cultural, ecological and geophysical technologies. Our bodies are largely made up of water; it is both a source of life and a deadly element, bringing both salvation and danger. It can also mark a border or be a sign of pollution, a carrier of time, memory and change, of colonial exploitation or indigenous struggles. Water is transnational, transcorporeal and political. Most human settlements were built along rivers. Rivers are the backbone, lungs, legs and head of urban development. They cut through invisible and visible walls and fences and serve as both a means of transport and a barrier. This is also the case in St. Pölten, which was once founded on the Traisen in Roman times.
The starting point for the exhibition “The Way of the Water” was a series of fundamental questions for the artists: What does it mean to you to enter into a collaboration with the river? How can art be created in interaction with the river, its seasonal changes, the sun, the drought, the rainfall, its artificial forms and changing shapes? How can we convey our humanity as part of a “hypersea” of myriad bodies of water? Can we design interventions or conceptual gestures that not only talk about environmental personhood, but subtly connect with it? Talking to the river, sitting in the river, floating with the river?
The route starts at the Mühlbach at Solektiv, the selforganised initiative for art, culture and nature, and then follows the course of the Traisen and the Mühlbach from south to north. On our way along the riverside promenade of the government quarter, we pass under numerous bridges where artistic interventions deal with themes such as ecological humanness or the ecological footprint of so-called green energy.
We come across the untold stories of the flooded labour camp at the Viehofner Lakes. On the way back to the Mühlbach we pass the water towers of the former Glanzstoff factory and the fountain of the Mevlana mosque. We follow the leafy paths along the Mühlbach stream and end up at a former snack stand that was brought to St. Pölten from Vienna in the late 1970s.
The artists coming to St. Pölten from near and far will have a decisive influence on the themes of the Tangente – ecology, memory and democracy. The projects consist partly of new commissions, partly of existing works adapted to the new contexts: from drawings made by the water, to instruments floating in the river, to audio pieces about what is under the surface of the water. The invited artists share an interest in interventions in the environment, in the power of simple gestures, but also in broader themes such as the exploitation and privatisation of planetary resources, the mythological or spiritual interpretations of the fluid, aquatic forms of memory or the changes in weather and climate. The art parcours is intended for both local and international visitors, who can explore it during a tour by bicycle, on foot and perhaps even by kayak, but it also offers interesting discoveries for those who happen to be passing by.
An important source of inspiration for the exhibition are the writings of feminist scholar Astrida Neimanis on “hydrofeminism” and the idea that we humans belong to the planetary “hydrocommons” via the leaky, permeable and transcorporeal ontology of water. Together with the river, we will use art as a language that makes tangible what it really means to drink a glass of water, to think with water and to be water yourself, both in St. Pölten and elsewhere in the world.
Joanna Warsza (born 1976) is a curator of visual and performing arts and architecture. She studied dramaturgy at the Warsaw Theatre Academy and at the University of Paris 8. Warsza works primarily in public spaces and explores social and political agendas in her curatorial projects. In 2022 she co-curated the Polish pavilion at the Biennale Arte in Venice and since 2014 she has been programme director of the CuratorLab at the Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm. She lives in Berlin and Warsaw.
Lorena Moreno Vera (born 1986) is an interdependent curator. In her work she explores alternative narratives through sonic and visual phenomena at the intersection of feminist theory and philosophy of science. She has curated various exhibitions and collaborated with institutions and independent projects in Mexico, Austria, Spain, the USA and Australia. She lives and works in Vienna and Mexico City.
Contributors
- Kuratiert von Joanna Warsza
- Associate Curator Lorena Moreno Vera
- Künstler:innen Elisabeth von Samsonow, Eva Grubinger & Werner Feiersinger, Javier Téllez, Katarina Pirak Sikku, Kollektiv Neonpink, Paola Torres Núñez del Prado, Rainer Prohaska, Regina Hügli, Rita Fischer, Roberta Lazo Valenzuela, Sissel Tolaas, Slavs & Tatars, Sophie Utikal, Ursula K. Le Guin, Hélène Meyer & Filip Van Dingenen, Jimena Croceri, Lisa Truttmann, Christina Gruber, Klara Hobza, Lisa Tan, Cecylia Malik, Clara Laila Abid Alsstar, Edgar Calel, Amanda Piña