Elena Filipovic https://www.artnews.com The Leading Source for Art News & Art Event Coverage Thu, 13 Jun 2024 02:45:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://www.artnews.com/wp-content/themes/vip/pmc-artnews-2019/assets/app/icons/favicon.png Elena Filipovic https://www.artnews.com 32 32 168890962 For Director Elena Filipovic, the Kunstmuseum Basel Is a ‘Spaceship’ Carrying Us into the Future https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/for-director-elena-filipovic-the-kunstmuseum-basel-is-a-spaceship-carrying-us-into-the-future-1234709648/ Thu, 13 Jun 2024 06:15:00 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234709648 Each time curator Elena Filipovic opens an exhibition, she convenes the institution’s entire staff, including its guards and shop cashiers, to participate in an in-depth discussion with the featured artist. I got to witness this in 2022, when Filipovic, then the director of the Kunsthalle Basel, led a walk-through of Berenice Olmedo’s newest hanging sculptures, made of wriggling prosthetic-like limbs. Filipovic wanted her staff to meet the young artist and urged them to ask her questions.

It is this unique perspective and approach to curating and institution building that has made Filipovic one of today’s most closely watched curators. After nearly 10 years of running the non-collecting, contemporary-focused Kunsthalle, she embarked on a new journey two months ago, becoming the director of the storied 17th-century Kunstmuseum Basel. A child of immigrants who grew up in Southern California’s Inland Empire, she is still somewhat of an outsider in Basel; she is the first non-European and only the second woman to lead the Kunstmuseum, the holdings of which span from the 15th century to today.

“I’d like to think I bring the best of both worlds with me,” Filipovic recently told ARTnews of her upbringing in the US and her adopted home of Europe, where she in 1998. During her tenure at the Kunsthalle, she organized more than 60 exhibitions, including acclaimed ones for artists like Michael Armitage, Matthew Angelo Harrison, Yngve Holen, Anne Imhof, and Tiona Nekkia McClodden. In 2022, she organized the Croatian Pavilion at that year’s Venice Biennale, and, prior to moving to Basel, she was senior curator at Wiels in Brussels, from 2009 to 2014, and she co-curated, with Adam Szymczk, the 2008 Berlin Biennale.

MoMA PS1 director Connie Butler once called Filipovic a “visionary,” adding that she had “one of the best curatorial programs anywhere.” When she was selected to lead the Kunstmuseum, the selection committee’s president Felix Uhlmann said, at the time, that Filipovic’s “infectious enthusiasm for the entire spectrum of art history, and her ability to inspire people for art” is ultimately what made the committee choose her for the position.

Installation view of Tiona Nekkia McClodden’s 2023 solo exhibition at the Kunsthalle Basel, curated by Elena Filipovic.

Filipovic is a conciliatory figure, whose new mandate includes strengthening the museum’s global standing and ushering it into the future, at a time when art institutions around the world strive for more inclusivity, both in terms of their public and in the telling of art history. With the support of the institution, Filipovic said she is also “pushing to go further and faster.”

She added, “It’s important that we all remember that this should not be a cemetery of beautiful dead things, but a spaceship. It should carry us into the future.”

A museum spaceship may seem like a concept out of step with a 17th-century institution, housing over 300,000 works spanning seven centuries. But Filipovic argues the Kunstmuseum was radical for its day: it became the world’s first public museum in 1661.

The question that animates her vision for the Kunstmuseum, which will also undergo a renovation beginning in 2027, she said, is “How can you run a very old museum that nevertheless has inscribed in its DNA the idea that it should still speak to generations in the future?”

The exterior of a white-brick museum building on a corner with tram tracks passing by.
Exterior view of the Kunstmuseum Basel’s main building, 2022.

One way Filipovic hopes to carry the institution forward is by exhibiting the work of underrepresented artists more frequently, including in a planned rehang beginning this summer in the museum’s newest building that draws on an expansive acquisition strategy that she has already implemented, adding pieces by Helen Frankenthaler, Julie Mehretu, and Cameron Rowland. “Every acquisition becomes a manifesto of sorts, and a chance to rethink what legacy we leave for future generations,” she said.

Filipovic recently commissioned Louis Lawler to create a work for the new building’s foyer. Lawler’s photographs can seem to swipe across, distort, or blur canonic artworks, questioning the systems and institutions that have lionized and valued them. Lawler’s work “becomes a commentary on what has been glorified in the museum and how we are taking steps to actually look at that,” she said.

But, Filipovic also wants to continue to activate works already in the collection, including some of the museum’s most famed ones, by pursuing and displaying new research, which is also already underway, about their historical contexts, subjects, and provenance. Part of her aim is to show how centuries-old work remains acutely relevant to the questions we face today. Take Hans Holbein the Younger’s The Dead Christ in the Tomb (1521–22), a life-size and somewhat jarring depiction of the deceased Jesus in the early stages of decay. The work, she said, “speaks to our present at a time of crisis and war and death. Our society has had some of the same problems and questions and yet resilience has carried us through.”

A very horizontal, life-size painting of the body of the dead Christ with a very pointed chin and in the early stages of decay.
Hans Holbein the Younger, The Dead Christ in the Tomb, 1521–22.

And in maintaining a permanent collection that dates back nearly 400 years, Filipovic will also have to navigate the Kunstmuseum through delicate situations like restitution claims, several of which have come up in the past few years. These include a 2020 settlement for an undisclosed sum over the museum’s purchase of 200 works once owned by a Jewish collector from a 1933 auction, and an ongoing claim over a Henri Rousseau painting a collector sold to support herself while in exile in Switzerland after fleeing Nazi persecution in Germany. (In a statement in January, the museum said it is negotiating a “just and fair solution” with the latter collector’s heirs.)

While Filipovic had not been involved in those restitution claims, she spoke more broadly about how she plans to address such claims going forward, including continuing to support extensive, proactive research into the provenance of artworks in the collection, begun by her predecessor Josef Helfenstein, and then finding ways to share that information with the public.

“Once that the research has been done, I think it is the responsibility of the museum—and it has already been committed to this before my time, and it will continue to during my time—to render this information accessible,” she said.

Painting of four black men in green suits with white suits against a green background.
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s A Culmination (2016) was acquired by the Kunstmuseum Basel in 2017.

When it comes to the collection rehang, an exercise that has become something of a global trend of late, Filipovic said the initiative is less about following the lead of other institutions than it is a “feeling that there are so many stories that can be told,” she said. “By rehanging the collection, you’re demanding that the public notice. That every juxtaposition might provoke a new reading of each work.”

Her aim, she continued, is “not to give the public the feeling that [the collection] has been set up and is sleeping [nor] that these truths are inalienable. It is not so.”

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Elena Filipovic Becomes Director of Switzerland’s Kunstmuseum Basel https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/elena-filipovic-kunstmuseum-basel-director-1234671838/ Fri, 16 Jun 2023 12:18:09 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/?p=1234671838 Kunsthalle Basel curator Elena Filipovic will become the director of the Kunstmuseum Basel in Switzerland, where she will start in that new position on June 1, 2024. The museum’s current leader since 2016, Josef Helfenstein, is set to retire.

At the Kunsthalle Basel, Filipovic has developed a closely watched program that has featured an array of celebrated shows, including ones for Michael Armitage, Anicka Yi, Dora Budor, Deana Lawson, Wong Ping, and many more.

The two current shows she curated for the Kunsthalle Basel, by P. Staff and Tiona Nekkia McClodden, also received praise during Art Basel.

Born in Los Angeles in 1972, Filipovic is known for her forward-thinking, venturesome sensibility. She curated the 2008 Berlin Biennale with Adam Szymczyk and the Croatian Pavilion for the 2022 Venice Biennale. Prior to joining the Kunsthalle Basel in 2014 as director, becoming the first woman to lead the museum, she was senior curator for the Wiels Contemporary Art Centre in Forest, Belgium.

Her Ph.D. thesis was on Marcel Duchamp, and she has repeatedly returned to the Dadaist’s work and artists inspired by it, such as David Hammons, in books she has written.

“The art historian in me couldn’t be more thrilled and also more deeply honored by the opportunity to lead one of the world’s great art museums in a city that is so strongly committed to the arts, and thereby continue the remarkable work carried out by Josef Helfenstein,” Filipovic said in a statement. “I very much look forward to this new task of shaping the museum’s future so that its rich history and unrivalled collection remain alive in the public awareness with new content and narratives.”

She continued, “As someone who believes fundamentally in the vital civic role of museums, it is exhilarating to reflect on the Kunstmuseum Basel and its possibilities, and importantly also on how it can respond to a world that is becoming ever more complex.”

Correction, 6/16/23, 8:50 a.m.: This article previously stated that Filipovic was named director of the Kunsthalle Basel, where she is curator. She has been named director of the Kunstmuseum Basel.

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Elena Filipovic to Helm Kunsthalle Basel https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/elena-filipovic-to-helm-kunsthalle-basel-59725/ https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/elena-filipovic-to-helm-kunsthalle-basel-59725/#respond Tue, 15 Apr 2014 12:40:00 +0000 https://www.artnews.com/artnews/news/elena-filipovic-to-helm-kunsthalle-basel-59725/ Filipovic is currently senior curator of WIELS Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels. She will take up her new post Nov. 1.

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American-born art historian and curator Elena Filipovic has been named director of Kunsthalle Basel. She succeeds Adam Szymczyk, who in November was named artistic director of Documenta 14, which will take place in summer 2017. Filipovic is currently senior curator of WIELS Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels. She will take up her new post Nov. 1.

With Szymczyk, Filipovic, 42, co-curated the 5th Berlin Biennial (2008) and, with Marieke van Hal and Solveig Øvstebø, co-edited The Biennial Reader: Anthology on Large-Scale Perennial Exhibitions of Contemporary Art (2010). She has curated a number of traveling retrospectives, including “Marcel Duchamp: A Work that is not a Work ‘of Art'” (2008-2009), “Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Specific Objects without Specific Form” (2010-2011), “Alina Szapocznikow: Sculpture Undone, 1955-1972,” co-curated with Joanna Mytkowska (2011-2012), and “Franz Erhard Walther: The Body Decides” (2014).

She has also organized solo exhibitions with artists such as Petrit Halilaj, Leigh Ledare, Klara Lidén and Lorna Macintyre. Filipovic holds a doctorate in art history from Princeton University.

Kunsthalle Basel was inaugurated in 1872 and was renovated in 2004 by architects Miller & Maranta. 

 

 

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