Wer hat was davon I 2017

From the series “Austrian cultural heritage”: The Butterfly House

 In Vienna’s first district, the historical center of the city, between the National Library, the Government Palace and the Opera, is the Butterfly House. 
Within the midst of the copious vegetation and butterfly spectacle, visitors can find four fiberglass figures. These sculptures, done by the Swedish-Peruvian artist Felipe Letterstern during the 1990s, are plaster models taken directly from the body of inhabitants of the Amazon.
This greenhouse, like many others of its kind scattered throughout Europe, is categorized as a Palm House, Palmenhaus. This concept is historically rooted in the imperial need to collect and store exotic items from research journeys to the colonies in the 19th  and 20th  centuries. These trips were intended to discover regions not yet seen by European eyes, but they also had a purely scientific aim of collecting, cataloguing and naming the "new" species.
The place is visited daily by hundreds of tourists and at the same time, local public, families, schools and kindergarten groups will visit the place with the idea, not only to know the imperial history of Austria, but also to accept "the exotic" as an implicit constituent part of its cultural heritage.

Developed as a part of the exhibition “Experimental arrangement of acting unruly” Galerie IG Bildende Kunst
Thanks to: Elke Smodic, Vlatka Frketić, Andrea Hubin, Jonas Jahns, Nora Lička, Ramona Rieder, Anja Voglsam
Photographs I Collages I Performance I Interventions ©2017