Temporary Exhibition
Zora Kreuzer - Elektro City
23.03. - 16.06.2024
Light is the prerequisite for our visual perception. Zora Kreuzer transforms the Klocker Museum into a light space and invites visitors to consciously experience perceptual-physiological effects.
Art Box
New Skies - Lukas Dworschak
04.11.2023 - 16.06.2024
Lukas Dworschak (*1993 in Innsbruck, lives and works in Vienna) deals with the effects of technologisation on individual and collective consciousness.
Permanent Exhibition
The Art of Collecting
Part II
24.06.2023 - 16.06.2024
For the second part of the series, we invited our 2023 Art Award winner Christine Ljubanović to explore the collection with us. The aim was to use the artist's eye to make an initial pre-selection for a second excerpt from the Klocker Collection.
Discover Our Collection: Pink
The colour pink has undergone a wide range of changes in meaning and interpretation over the course of art history. Nowadays, pink is usually associated with women or girls, as pink appears romantic, soft or even naive. It is only since the middle of the 20th century that pink has been perceived as a feminine colour, while blue has become a symbol of masculinity. In art, pink is often found in depictions of women or goddesses in order to emphasise their feminine and innocent side. To break with these traditions of the pink colour, pink is often given a political or socially critical role in contemporary art. Especially in feminist art, pink is used to point out the injustice of women in society or to thematise these traditional gender roles in a provocative way.