Fullscreen_img_4312
KØS

Denmark’s only
museum of art
in public spaces

Subscribe
to newsletter


/

KØS
Nørregade 29
DK 4600 Køge
+45 56 67 60 20
info@koes.dk

Tuesday-Sunday 11-17
Monday closed
40 min from
Copenhagen H

Michael_Arad__Study_model_of_Hudson_River_Voids___2002__credit_Michael_Arad.jpg

Seminar: Memorials today – between a collective history of loss and new artistic strategies

Friday 23 January 2015

Speakers:

Michael Arad, architect and partner with Handel Architects, the architect behind the 9/11 Memorial, Ground Zero, New York

James E. Young, Distinguished University Professor and Director of the Institute for Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst

Michael Hviid Jacobsen, Professor of Sociology at Aalborg University and program director of the Master of Humanistic Palliative Care

Mattias Ekman, PhD (architectural theory and memory studies)

Inge Adriansen, PhD (Nordic folklore and cultural history), curator at The Museum of Southern Jutland/Museum Sønderjylland – Sønderborg Slot

Mette Haakonsen, MA (art history) and co-curator of the exhibition Power Monuments People – Memorials today

Lene Bøgh Rønberg, PhD (art history) and curator at KØS Museum of art in public spaces

Moderator: Martin Krasnik

Memorials – an evolving genre
The memorial is a classic genre within art in public spaces; one that bears testament to important events and persons from history. The genre is currently seeing a renewed interest in the erection of new and groundbreaking monuments that reflect current social, artistic, and societal tendencies. Several scholars within the field even speak of a monument boom or a monument mania, a fact that testifies to a colossal need for processing individual as well as collective grief. This development has prompted a new way of relating to memorials; one that challenges the traditions within the genre. New artistic modes of expression and new strategies are employed, thereby reinvigorating and reinventing the memorial genre and giving it a prominent place on the artistic agenda in Denmark and abroad. Today, memorials are not just landmarks that help us navigate our historical past; they also lay down new aesthetic tracks that interact with the overall contemporary art scene and point ahead in time.

With the seminar Memorials today – between a collective history of loss and new artistic strategies KØS focuses on the question of how a classic genre within the public space can be reinvigorated and imbued with new relevance in an ongoing interplay with the culture that surrounds it. How do we use memorials today, and what values do we attribute to them?

Focusing on some of the most important new memorials in the world, this seminar takes its point of departure in two main movements within memorial culture today: loss and trauma and new representations. Much-discussed and even controversial memorials such as the 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero in New York, designed by the architect Michael Arad, The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin, created by the architect Peter Eisenman, and the Monument to Denmark’s international effort after 1948 by the artist Finn Reinbothe are all examples of memorials that have been raised to loss and trauma within the last ten years. On the other hand, the concept of new representations covers spontaneous, temporary memorials and monuments to groups and minorities that have traditionally been overlooked within the genre.

Target group
The seminar is aimed at all who have a particular interest in memorial culture and to professionals within the arts and social sciences. It is relevant to all who work with art and architecture in public spaces. The seminar takes its point of departure in the extensive research project Power Monuments People – Memorials today, which focuses on the latest and most important movements within the memorial genre. Part of the project consists of the international exhibition bearing the same name currently on display at KØS Museum of art in public spaces until 22 February 2015.

Schedule

10:00 – 10:30 Registration and coffee

10.30 – 10:45 Welcome / Christine Buhl Andersen, director of KØS Museum of art in public spaces.

MODULE 1: LOSS AND TRAUMA

Focus: The Monument to Denmark’s international effort after 1948 at the Citadel in Copenhagen

10:45 – 11:00 Lene Bøgh Rønberg, PhD and curator at KØS Museum of art in public spaces

Regarding the curatorial choice of the Monument to Denmark’s international effort after 1948 for the exhibition Power Monuments People – Memorials today at KØS Museum of art in public spaces.

11:00 – 11:15 Film screening: A short film featuring reflections on the creation of the Monument to Denmark’s international effort after 1948. Participants: the artist Finn Reinbothe and former Chief of Defense Jesper Helsø.

11:15 – 11:45 Mattias Ekman, PhD in architectural theory and memory studies
On the importance of memorials to collective memory, based on Ekman’s article “Remember! The spatial orchestration of memory in the Monument to Denmark’s international effort after 1948.”

11:45 – 12:00 Question time

12:00 – 12:15 Brief break

Focus: 9/11 Memorial, Ground Zero, New York

12:15 – 12:45 Michael Arad, architect and partner with Handel Architects; the architect behind the 9/11 Memorial, Ground Zero, New York
On the aesthetic, human, and local policy considerations and reflections associated with the creation of the 9/11 Memorial.

12:45 – 13:00 Questions and discussion

13:00 – 14:00 Lunch

MODULE 2: NEW MODES OF REPRESENTATION

Focus points: Memorials today – an evolving genre

14:00 – 14.30 Mette Haakonsen, MA (art history) and co-curator of the exhibition Power Monuments People – Memorials today
On the status of memorials today and where the genre is heading.

14.30 – 15:00 James E. Young, Distinguished University Professor and Director of the Institute for Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst
On a new generation of memorial artists, based on Young’s article “The Memorial’s Arc: Between Berlin’s Denkmal and New York City’s 9/11 Memorial’.

15:00 – 15:15 Questions and discussion

15:15 – 15:45 Coffee

Focus point: From the classical monument to new chosen ones

15:45 – 16:05 Inge Adriansen, PhD in Nordic folklore and cultural history, curator at The Museum of Southern Jutland/Museum Sønderjylland – Sønder¬borg Slot
On the classic Danish monument and on what has – and has not – been found worthy of remembrance.

16:05 – 16:25 Michael Hviid Jacobsen, Professor of Sociology at Aalborg University and program director of the Master of Humanistic Palliative Care
On news ways of remembering, based on the emergence of new, temporary and spontaneous memorials.

16:25 – 16:45 Lene Bøgh Rønberg, PhD (art history) and curator at KØS Museum of art in public spaces
On the new groups and minorities now commemorated by memorials after having traditionally been overlooked by the memorial genre.

16:45 – 17:00 Summarising questions and discussion

17:00 – 18:00 Reception; wine and snacks will be served

Date: Friday 23 January 2015

Location:
Kosmopol Konference Center
Fiolstræde 44
1171 København K

Registration: Follow this link

The fee is DKK 350 (USD 63.60)

Arranged by: KØS Museum of art in public spaces