Jump to content

Barbara Schurz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Barbara Schurz
Барбара Шурц
Born1973
EducationVienna University
Alma materVienna Academy of Fine Arts
Known forPerformance art
Activism
MovementPoststructuralism

Barbara Schurz (Russian transliteration: Барбара Шурц) (born 1973) is an Austrian artist and self-described "revolutionary activist".[citation needed]

Life and work

[edit]

At Vienna University she pursued Slavic Studies and Women's Studies. Subsequently, she studied conceptual art at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. She began traveling around the world, living as an artist and author in Moscow and Berlin, in addition to Vienna.

Schurz is best known for her books, co-written with Alexander Brener, that address the boundary between art and politics from an activist perspective. These are heavily influenced by poststructuralism, particularly the writings of Michel Foucault, and focus their attacks largely on capitalism and imperialism. Schurz accompanied Brener to the 'Violence to Endurance: Extreme Curating' art lecture at the ICA to both protest and involve themselves in the lecture. While there Brener defecated in front of the audience while Schurz threw peanuts at the lecturers.[1]

Books

[edit]
  • Was tun? (1999, ISBN 3-85266-101-3)
  • Furzende Völker (2000, ISBN 3-85266-130-7)
  • Tattoos auf Gefängnissen (2001, ISBN 3-85266-157-9)
  • Bukaka Spat Here (2001, Austria, ISBN 3-9501567-1-2; 2002, UK, ISBN 0-9520274-4-5)

References

[edit]