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Joseph Beuys

Social Utopias Revisited

Three theoretical works in this exhibition provide a structure for three visual areas: Social Green, Social Transparency, Social Sculpture. Various designs will all represent the various layers and facets of social design since 1900.
In a public programme with lectures, themes from the exhibition will be further explored.

Exhibition, October 4, 2009 - February 14, 2010

What contribution can design make to the future of our society? In the context of current discussions of social design, it seems appropriate to take a look at the past. Already in the transition from the 19th to the 20th century, Germany and the Netherlands in particular were the site of a growing number of attempts to critically review everyday culture, industrial culture, and even the totality of life ‘from sofa cushion to urban design’ (Herman Muthesius). With regard to this fundamental questioning of traditional styles of life and living, there is a resemblance between the fins-de-siècle of 1900 and 2000. The retrospective perspective on which the exhibition Unresolved Matters is based is not, however, intended as a simplistic ‘learning from history’. Instead, it follows on from the question of to what extent a society can discover its potential, evolve, and reflect on it.

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Buckminster Fuller

Buckminster Fuller had one of the most fascinating and original minds of his century. Born in 1895 in Milton, Massachusetts, he was the latest--if not the last--of the New England Transcendentalists. Like the transcendentalists, Fuller rejected the established religious and political notions of the past and adhered to an idealistic system of thought based on the essential unity of the natural world and the use of experiment and intuition as a means of understanding it.... more

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