INSIGHTS INTO THE CREATION OF THE EXHIBITION ‘UNKNOWN FAMILIARS’ - THE COLLECTIONS OF THE VIENNA INSURANCE GROUP
01/10/2024
5 minutes
After more than a year of intensive preparation, the ‘Unknown Familiars’ exhibition was officially opened at Vienna's Leopold Museum in May 2024. Spread over 10,000 square metres, the exhibition brings together more than 200 works of art from six corporate collections of the Vienna Insurance Group.
Philippe Batka and co-curator Vanessa Joan Müller selected the exhibits in a time-consuming process and published an extensive catalogue with essays on all the exhibited artworks to accompany the exhibition. I myself was able to support the curatorial team as a curatorial assistant. My tasks included organising the transport, drawing up loan contracts and insurance policies and coordinating all the necessary materials.
The six corporate collections are located in Serbia, Latvia, the Czech Republic and Austria. More than half of the works therefore had to be transported to Vienna from afar. We were actively supported by our colleagues in the respective countries, who provided precise measurements, packaging conditions and conservation guidelines. One key aspect that directly links art with insurance is art insurance. All works of art are comprehensively insured from the beginning, during and until they are ‘back home’. This requires written and photo-documentary protocols, as well as compliance with the transport packaging on arrival at and departure from the museum. Depending on the material and value, a customised climate-controlled crate or three layers of bubble wrap are used.
The six corporate collections are located in Serbia, Latvia, the Czech Republic and Austria. More than half of the works therefore had to be transported to Vienna from afar. We were actively supported by our colleagues in the respective countries, who provided precise measurements, packaging conditions and conservation guidelines. One key aspect that directly links art with insurance is art insurance. All works of art are comprehensively insured from the beginning, during and until they are ‘back home’. This requires written and photo-documentary protocols, as well as compliance with the transport packaging on arrival at and departure from the museum. Depending on the material and value, a customised climate-controlled crate or three layers of bubble wrap are used.
An exciting example of the elaborate preparations is the almost 10 metre high wall installation ‘A New Fiery Community’ (2022) by Barbara Kapusta. The largest installation in the exhibition was specially adapted for the atrium of the Leopold Museum. As the artwork made of self-adhesive vinyl films has no fixed dimensions and is always produced on site, a lifting platform and a company were required to print the large-format films. The attached photos show the result of the precise planning between us, the artist and various companies.
In general, the entire exhibition process required close co-operation and precise planning. From the selection of the works to the logistical challenges to the final presentation - each phase was and is crucial to the success. The result is an exhibition that focuses not only on the artworks themselves, but also on the stories and visions they embody.
The exhibition is open until 6 October 2024 at the Leopold Museum, Museumsplatz 1, 1070 Vienna, daily from 10 am to 6 pm.
25/09/2024
SDG Flag Day 2024: How VIG Contributes to the Global Goals of the 2030 Agenda
Next Article