Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt presents Glam! The Performance Of Style an exhibition on view June 14–September 22, 2013.

The time between 1970 and 1975 is one of those rare historical periods in which a certain style spread throughout all cultural fields, from fashion, art, film, and photography to pop music. Based on the iconography established by Andy Warhol with the foundation of his Factory in 1962 and his Superstars concept, Glam originated from British art colleges as an eccentric combination of artistic strategies in the late 1960s. Maintaining that there was no hierarchical relationship between high culture and mass culture, the pop artist Richard Hamilton, who taught at Newcastle University, played a decisive role in the development of this new aesthetics. The congenial amalgamation of pop and fine art was uncompromisingly realized by Roxy Music, a band centred on the two art college graduates Bryan Ferry and Brian Eno in 1971: from its music and the design of its covers to its costumes for the stage, the brash gesamtkunstwerk as which Roxy Music presented itself was charged by cool and precise design solutions, chic eroticism, and an aesthetic sensibility that took surfaces, codes, and signs from the more and less recent past as styles to be applied, freely sampled, and remixed: Glam was born, and Roxy Music proved to be a universally successful pop phenomenon.
Organized by Tate Liverpool in collaboration with the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt and the Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz, Glam! The Performance of Style, encompassing more than one hundred works as well as extensive documentary material, will shed light on the different facets and influences of Glam, and do so in an architectural setting whose glitter curtains, spotlights, and stage props turn the gallery spaces into an arena for self-presentation. Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds (1966), floating reflective air cushions, will be shown as a newly produced permanent installation in the Schirn’s Rotunda. A publication with essential texts on the era of Glam will be forthcoming on the occasion of the show. A comprehensive program with guided tours, artist lectures, film screenings, and music events will accompany the exhibition.
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt
Römerberg, D-60311 Frankfurt
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Wednesday–Thursday 10am–10pm
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