Isa Rosenberger

Isa Rosenberger examines radical political changes and their social and economic consequences. The starting point of Rosenberger’s investigations is often ideologically charged architectural and monumental manifestations in urban space, for the reason that they reveal the changes in the prevailing orders of perception. Rosenberger documents places and conversations using photography and video. She combines these documentations with fictional contents, so that her works never remain merely in the field of theoretical debate. By juxtaposing subjective views and everyday biographies with the canonised representations of history, Rosenberger examines the construction of reality and the power of images related to it, in this way seeking to allow established stories to be newly reflected upon.

Isa Rosenberger (born 1969) lives and works in Vienna. Rosenberger studied at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna and at the Jan van Eyck Academy in Maastricht. Her recent solo exhibitions include Espiral, Grazer Kunstverein, 2011; Edith Russ Site for Media Art, Oldenburg, 2009 and Secession, Vienna, 2008. Recent group exhibitions include It’s The Political Economy, Stupid, Pori Art Museum, 2013 and Austrian Cultural Forum, New York, 2012; Thessaloniki Centre of Contemporary Art, 2012; Appropriation of the Present – Exhibition of Works from the Collection, Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst GfzK, Leipzig, 2012; Second World, Galerija Nova, Zagreb, 2011; Triennale Linz 1.0, State Gallery Linz, 2010 and Eccentric Paths II, The Latvian National Museum of Art, Riga. In 2008 she received the Otto Mauer Prize for Fine Art.

Njideka Akunyili Crosby

Njideka Akunyili Crosby makes graphic images that at first glance, take the form of traditional Western paintings. Upon closer inspection, nuances in her mode of representation emerge which connote the multi-layered nature of her cultural experience as well as its complications.  She extrapolates from her training in western painting a new visual language that represents her experience as a cosmopolitan Nigerian. Akunyili Crosby grew up in a Nigeria acculturated to and independent from Britain and immigrated to the United States as an adult. This visual language allows her to make images that suggest narratives with universal allegorical interpretations. Akunyili Crosby creates a metaphor of cultural syncretism by formally juxtaposing disparate elements such as flat versus illusionistic spaces; simple versus elaborate areas; interiors versus exteriors and Nigerian versus Western fashions.

Njideka Akunyili Crosby is a Nigerian-born visual artist who creates painted drawings with print and collage elements. She was a 2012 artist-in-residence at the Studio Museum in Harlem and is a 2013 participant of the Bronx Museum Artist in Marketplace program. She received her MFA from Yale University in 2011, Post-Baccalaureate certificate from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 2006, and her BA from Swarthmore College in 2004. Akunyili Crosby has recently exhibited work in Primary Sources at the Studio Museum, Harlem, Lost and Found: Belief and Doubt in Contemporary Pictures at the Museum of New Art, Detroit, and The Bearden Project at the Studio Museum, Harlem. She is one of the 2013 recipients of the prestigious Rema Hort Mann Foundation grant. Her work is in the collections of the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Yale University Art gallery, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Rubell Family collection.

Tobias Dostal

Tobias Dostal works to rid the film medium of the classic canvas by restaging the movie in a space with sculptural elements – rebuilt 16 mm projectors and projection screens made of wood or paper constructions, for example. Addressing the roots of the film and similar artistic approaches in the past is crucial to his work. After extensive experiments in a variety of media, formats and techniques and dealing with artistic approaches such as the “Expanded Cinema” and structural film and the history of film, he found his visual language through the use of celluloid film.

Tobias Dostal (born 1982 in Bad Hersfeld, Germany) studied drawing, film and skuplture at the Braunschweig Universitity of Arts. His Film installations have been shown in  group exhibitions at the gallery of La Esmeralda, New Mexico; Kunstschaufenster am Hallenbad, Wolfsburg; End in Nation, Kapitelsaal, Bad Hersfeld; Films about being God, Kreuzberg Pavillion, Berlin; Metamorphosen, Allgemeiner Konsumverein, Braunschweig and the Up and Coming Film Festival, Hannover.