The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Monday, May 20, 2013
 
The Jewish Museum in New York Opens Photographic Wall Installation by Susan Hiller
Susan Hiller, The J. Street Project (Index), (detail: Coburg, Judenberg) 2002-2005, wall-based installation: 303 archival colour inkjets mounted on Kapaline, oak frames, index and map in adhesive vinyl, two walls, each approx. 394 x 78 in. / 1000 x 197 cm; dimensions variable, edition of 3 (+ 2AP). © Susan Hiller; Courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery, London.
NEW YORK, NY.- Finding and photographing every street in Germany with the prefix Juden (Jews) in its name: this was the task that the London-based, American-born artist Susan Hiller set for herself in 2002 after a chance encounter with a street sign reading “Judenstrasse” (“Jews’ Street”) in Berlin. She found the sign strangely ambiguous. It was meant to commemorate the Jewish community that once inhabited the area, but for Hiller it marked a history of discrimination, segregation and violence. She subsequently discovered that there were many streets throughout Germany containing the prefix Juden. “The Jews are gone,” Susan Hiller has said, “but the street names remain as ghosts of the past, haunting the present.”

Hiller completed The J. Street Project (2002 – 2005) three years later to much acclaim. Now, the photographic wall installation, film, and book debuts in New York City at The Jewish Museum on Sunday, November 9, 2008 (continuing through February 1, 2009).

At the core of this pioneering artist’s resonant exhibition are more than 300 identically scaled and framed color photographs of roads, streets, and paths—some mute, most with street signs reading variations ranging from Judenallee (avenue), to Judengraben (grove), to Judenweg (way) and beyond. Hung in a seven-foot-tall grid on a white wall on the Museum’s second floor, the photographs suggest the everydayness, and something more, in these thoroughfares in cities, suburbs, towns, and, perhaps most surprisingly, rustic roads and woodland paths. The signs recorded by Hiller now function as inadequate memorials to destroyed communities, some marking locations where Jews had lived segregated from public and municipal life, as far back as the 11th century.

Nearby this dense visual panorama of photographs hangs a large-scale, starkly simplified map of Germany and a list, pinpointing the location of each street. This map tells its own story, as a viewer notices how very few streets are to be found in the north of the country and how many in the south. In an adjacent gallery, a 67-minute single-channel video projection opens with a street lamp ablaze against a large, dark postwar building, its metallic street sign placing the viewer on “Jews’ Street.” The video footage shows all 303 sites and has been edited to reveal the texture and pace of ordinary life. People converse, children play, birds fly overhead, a scooter screeches past, traffic stops at a light, and a cyclist rides across the screen, the signs completely overlooked.

The artist has said that her use of “J. Street” recalls, with bitter irony, the loss of Jewish communities by using the type of classification terminology that the Nazis employed to destructive ends. The work’s title suggests the dangers of reducing individuals and groups to an abstract bureaucratic code. By probing the tension between past and present, Hiller has said that she hopes “the work will provide an opportunity for meditation not only on this incurable, traumatic absence, but also on the causes of more recent attempts to destroy minority cultures and erase their presence.” In the wake of genocide and ethnic violence in the Balkans, Rwanda, and Darfur, Hiller’s work has relevance to present-day world affairs.

The visitor to the exhibition can contemplate where and how Jewish families lived and worked on these streets, for, although shop fronts, advertisements, and graffiti testify to habitation, few of Hiller’s images show people. In “Judenpfad, Bad Königshofen, Bayern (#24),” the silhouette of a mother and child on a round blue sign, warning of children at play, on another level can be seen as echoing the long ago presence of other children, and in “Judengasse, Schutterwald, Baden-Württemberg (#244),” the letters in the street name seem to disappear into the cheery decorative border of a house. Hiller has created a universe of reverberations, whether it be “Am Judenkirchhof” (Jews’ graveyard) in a cemetery or “Judenhof” (Jews’ courtyard) on a snowy hill or “Judenleiten” (Jews’ route) in the fenced backyard of an ordinary house.

In 1938, the Nazis changed the names of all streets that referred to Jews. After World War II, many were changed back to their prewar names during the Allied program of de-Nazification, a name-restoring process that is ongoing. Perhaps the clearest reference to Germany’s troubled past can be seen in Hiller’s photograph taken in Berlin’s Spandau borough. Under a “Judenstrasse” sign, another sign denotes the street’s Nazi era name, Kinkelstrasse, which was inspired by a 19th-century German writer whose nationalist beliefs the Nazis admired. The decision to restore the name to Judenstrasse in 2002 came after much heated local debate. In the photograph, a red slash mars the Kinkelstrasse sign.

An American artist who has lived and worked in London since the early 1970s, Susan Hiller has shown widely throughout Europe and the U.S. over the course of a distinguished four-decade career. Before turning to art, Hiller studied anthropology to the PhD level. Many critics find her art-making practices to hinge on a sustained critique of the discipline she rejected. Her work was included in the exhibition, WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution (2007-2008), which originated at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and traveled to the National Museum of Women in the Arts; P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center; and the Vancouver Art Gallery. She is most widely known for Witness, an audio-sculpture commissioned by Artangel, London, in 2000 and exhibited at Tate Britain in 2001 before traveling to the Havana Biennale and the Biennale of Sydney. In 1998, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, devoted a solo exhibition to her work. In 1999, she participated in The Muse in the Museum, Museum of Modern Art, and returned to New York City two years later to show “Psi Girls,” her five-screen video installation, at the Gagosian Gallery. Susan Hiller was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1998 and a DAAD Fellowship in Berlin (2002-2003). The artist has produced a number of books, including After the Freud Museum (Book Works, 1996 and reprinted 2000). She holds the Baltic Chair of Contemporary Art at the University of Newcastle, Department of Fine Art.



Last Week News

November 10, 2008

Gemeentemuseum Fills Two Floors With Modern and Contemporary Art for the First Time

Oklahoma City Museum of Art Hosts American Impressionism from The Phillips Collection

William Holman Hunt and the Pre-Raphaelite Vision on View at Manchester Art Gallery

Role of Public Galleries and Museums Comes under Scrutiny

First Brussels Biennial Opens with Sixty Artists Participating

Berlinische Galerie Opens Panoramic Photographs of Berlin, 1949 - 1952 Exhibition

November Special Events at the Film Society of Lincon Center

Selections from the Robert Gore Rifkind Center for German Expressionist Studies at LACMA

The Museum of Latin American Art Inaugurates The Lexus Gallery

Princeton University Art Museum's Recently-opened Exhibition Focuses on the Body as Art

Theaters of Memory: Art and Holocaust Opens at the Jewish Museum

SFMOMA Presents Major Overview Of Participation-based Art

Turner Exhibition Set to Open in Russia

Cars, Trees & Traditions Adds Nostalgic Holiday Note to Walter P. Chrysler Museum Exhibitions

Heather James Fine Art Announces New Director Kimberly Nichols

Stuart Karten Design's Zon Hearing Aid Wins 2008 Cooper-Hewitt People's Design Award

Academy Award(R) Nominee Joan Allen and Academy Award(R) Winner Jeremy Irons to Headline Cast of Lifetime Original Movie

Russian Senator's Exhibition of Scythian Gold Draws Viscount Linley and Other VIP Guests

November 9, 2008

Winners of the Chinese Contemporary Art Awards 2008 Exhibit at Ullens Center in Beijing

SFMOMA Presents A Retrospective On Sculptor Martin Puryear First Major Survey In 15 Years

LACMA Reunites Treasures from William Randolph Hearst's Famed Collection

Three Centuries of Alluring British Art on Paper at Christie's in December

Royal Academy Announces Andrea Palladio: His Life and Legacy for 2009

TMA's Elegant House Puts Williford Collection Back in Spotlight

Transpop: Korea Vietnam Remix at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

First Solo Museum Exhibition on West Coast of Puerto Rican Artist Arnaldo Roche

Kunstmuseum Basel Opens Hannah Villiger Exhibition

New Museum Ads Michelle Obama Painting Made by Elizabeth Peyton to Exhibition

American Art Campaign Completed at Harvard Art Museum

It's Beautiful Here, Isn't it...Photographs by Luigi Ghirri at Aperture Gallery

Dallas Museum of Art Opens Take your time: Olafur Eliasson

The Official Museum Directory - Now Available

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Receives $225,000 Getty Foundation Grant

David Chipperfield Architects Wins Competition to Build Extension to

Art Institute Taps Award-Winning Chef Tony Montano for Upcoming Restaurant at the Modern Wing

SFMOMA Announces Premiere of William Kentridge: Five Themes

Eduardo Díaz Named Director of the Smithsonian Latino Center

UNC-Asheville Selects Frank Harmon as Architect for Craft Campus

November 8, 2008

World Record For Juan Gris at Christie's New York - $20.8 Million For " Livre, pipe et verre"

Statens Museum for Kunst Presents Jordaens. The Making of a Masterpiece

Taubman Museum of Art Opens New Building To The Public Today

Major Collection of Modern and Contemporary German Art Donated to Harvard Art Museum

Corning Museum of Glass Unveils 2008 Rakow Commission by Zora Palová

Northern Stars and Southern Lights: The Golden Age of Finnish Art 1870-1920

To The Ends of the Earth, Painting The Polar Landscape

San Jose ICA Presents Manuel Neri Sculpture Exhibition

Russian Photography Exhibition Opens Nov. 8 at OU Art Museum

Demuth Museum to Mount Two-Part David Brumbach Exhibition

GL Strand Presents Acid Anarchy and Systematic Order - Nils Erik Gjerdevik

Design Museum Gent Presents 100 Years of Demeyere, Made in Belgium: the Art of Cooking

Museum Ludwig Presents First Solo Exhibiton in Germany For Jonas Mekas

Richter: Paintings from Private Collections at National Gallery of Scotland

Philippe de Montebello and Paula Zahn To Join Thirteen as Co-Hosts of SundayArts

Ian Wallace - A Literature of Images

Stattsgalerie Stuttgart Presents Fleischmann - Commemorating an Important Donation

German Artist Kai Althoff Presents First Canadian Exhibition at Vancouver Art Gallery

Eve Sussman & The Rufus Corporation at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art

Emilie Pitoiset - Animals Can't Laugh at Casino Luxembourg

Downtown Print Fair Reports Strong Attendance & Pleased Exhibitors

Nakashima Complex Listed on National Register of Historic Places

Carolee Schneemann Named 2008 Stan Brakhage Vision Award Winner

November 7, 2008

Albertina Presents Routes Through Modern Art - From The Collection of Eberhard W. Kornfeld

The Norton Simon Museum Presents Vermeer's A Lady Writing

The National Portrait Gallery Presents "One Life: The Mask of Lincoln"

Looking for Mushrooms - Beat Poets, Hippies, Funk and Minimal Art: Art and Counterculture

The Modern Age: Property from the Hillman Family Collection

Jean Muir: A Fashion Icon at The National Museum of Scotland

Revealed Anew Opens at the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center

Museum Exhibition of McBrien Collection Surveys and Celebrates 20th Century Japanese Craft

The RISD Museum of Art Presents Harry Callahan: Eleanor

Neuberger Museum of Art Announces Important Curatorial Appointment

Design Museum Gent Presents Hermann Jünger. Jewelry - Found Treasures

GL Strand Presents Kara Walker - Humour and Horror in Seductive Works

Eudora Welty in New York: Photographs of the Early 1930's

An Icon of American Advertising J. C. Leyendecker: America's "Other" Illustrator at the Morris Museum of Art

Queensland Art Gallery Presents War: The Prints of Otto Dix

The Museum of Modern Art in Brussels Presents Today COBRA

Saint Louis Art Museum Announces Expansion Delay

November 6, 2008

Getty Museum Brings Together Masterpieces of Italian Baroque From Carracci to Crespi

Alberto García-Alix: From Where There is No Return Opens at Museo Reina Sofia

Nestor Basterretxea: Basque Cosmogonic Series Donated to Museum of Fine Arts in Bilbao

Budapest Hosts Ferdinand Hodler: A Symbolist Vision Exhibition

Variations: The Architecture Photographs of Jenny Okun

Portrait Inspired by Dream of Quintuplets Birth Wins Top Photography Prize

Sotheby's To Sell Some of the Most Iconic and Best-Loved Original Illustrations of Winnie-the-Pooh

Alighiero Boetti: Order and Disorder Opened at Museum Ritter

Leading International Contemporary Art Fair for Photo-Based Art and Other Media Returns to Miami

Healing Art: Butcher, Frettolso Artwork on Display at Physicians Regional Medical Center

Portland Art Museum Acquires Sculpture of Ganesha

Portraits by Anderson & Low to Benefit the Elton John AIDS Foundation

New One-Man Show, Written and Performed by Josh Kornbluth Commissioned by the Contemporary Jewish Museum

Pharmaka Announces Which Way Berlin - L.A. ?

Lora Urbanelli Named New Director of the Montclair Art Museum

A Year of Performances and Exhibitions in New York City and D.C. Celebrates Hungary's Contemporary Arts

LACMA Opens its Doors to Experimental Group, Machine Project, for One-Day Only Event

University of Iowa to Proceed with Recovery of Art Building West

November 5, 2008

In the Chinese City. Perspectives on the Transmutations of an Empire Opens at CCCB

Rare Indian Textiles Showcase Exotic Designs in Exhibition at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Columbia Museum of Art Exhibition Reveals the Culture of the Ancient Chinese

Painting That Survived German Bombing and was Then Lost Surfaces At Bonhams Greek Sale

1950s North European Avant-Garde to be Auctioned at Sotheby's

Just Add Water: Photographs by Burk Uzzle in Book Published by Five Ties Publishing

First Major Exhibition in Italy for Tino Sehgal at Fondazione Nicola Trussardi

Museo Reina Sofia Exhibits A. C. The GATEPAC magazine (1931-1937)

Radio Play in Space Exhibition by Paul Plamper at Museum Ludwig

Dr. Sara Cochran, New Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at Phoenix Art Museum

Jeff Sonhouse Solo Exhibition at The Tilton Gallery

Francoise Sullivan the Second Recipient of Gershon Iskowitz Prize at the AGO

Donald Rodney In Retrospect at Institute of International Visual Arts

Dust: An Inquiry into One of Lifes Smallest Realities Premieres at Film Forum in December

Kansas City Office Building Reveals Art Exhibit

Regime Change Starts at Home on View at Irvine Contemporary

Aurora 2008: The Infinite Measure to Open in Norwich on November 12

Ground Broken for New Pfeiffer Wing at Ursinus' Berman Museum

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD

Related Stories



Important Judaica and Israeli & international art bring a combined $7.9 million at Sotheby's New York

Tunisia to auction ousted despot's treasures

Andy Warhol's Mao portraits excluded from the Beijing and Shanghai shows next year

China criticises French Qing dynasty seal auction

Christie's announces auction marking the first half century of the popular and luxurious interiors shop Guinevere

Nine new exhibits debut at San Diego International Airport

Rembrandt masterpiece "Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet" back on display at National Museum Cardiff

Amber: 40-million-year-old fossilised tree resin is Baltic gold

Egyptian artist Iman Issa wins the Ist FHN Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona Award

The main chapel of the Basilica of Santa Croce open for visits after five year restoration



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site