BMW Art Guide by Independent Collectors

Gianni Manhattan - Vienna, Austria

Young, International and Critically Astute

Barbara Kapusta, installation view The Giant, 2018. Photo: Justin Meekel
Barbara Kapusta, installation view The Giant, 2018. Photo: Justin Meekel

question that often pops up when discussing the state of the art scene in the Austrian capital. “Vienna is a great and interesting city, but it was dormant for so long,” says Laura Windhager, director of the young space Gianni Manhattan. “[It] desperately missed an emerging gallery that moved beyond the local scene.”

Windhager opened Gianni Manhattan in January 2017 in a white L-shaped basement space on a small street near the river, just outside one of the main gallery districts. Originally, she was hoping to recreate some of the excitement she had found in the urban environment of London, where she had studied. “I really missed the vibrancy of an art scene that values exchange and discourse,” she explained. “It was there that I encountered a lot of topics such as post-work, digital labor and un/productivity in relation to artistic practices.”

Zsófia Keresztes, installation view Sticky Fragility, 2018. Photo: Simon Veres,
Zsófia Keresztes, installation view Sticky Fragility, 2018. Photo: Simon Veres,
Marina Faust, installation view Once on TV, 2018. Photo: Simon Veres
Marina Faust, installation view Once on TV, 2018. Photo: Simon Veres

It was also while studying that Windhager got a first taste of the commercial gallery world, when she worked at one of Vienna’s established spaces to help fund her studies - Galerie Hubert Winter. “While working I became motivated to start my own gallery and to re-evaluate the model,” she explains. In the Gianni Manhattan programme, this involves taking a pointedly critical approach to its exhibitions, through talks, informal reading groups, screenings and a publishing house that specializes in artists’ writing. The gallery has a clear interest in certain topics, including language, bodies and their interaction with the world around us. Working with artists such as Barbara Kapusta and Sebastian Jefford, Windhager’s programme certainly seems to link aesthetically to an international network of young galleries that tend to emphasize critical engagement over commercial impact.

Sebastian Jefford, installation view Procrustean Flatulence, 2018. Photo: Simon Veres
Sebastian Jefford, installation view Procrustean Flatulence, 2018. Photo: Simon Veres

Given this, Windhager is well aware of the commercial pressures that make the gallery able to continue. Here, she recognizes the importance of international art fairs, especially those with a younger cohort of emerging galleries: Miart, Material and Paris Internationale were all in the 2018 calendar. Meanwhile, the gallery’s first ever booth at Basel’s Liste fair showed Zsófia Keresztes, a young Budapest-based artist whose slippery mosaic monsters were selected as “one to watch” by Artnet. “Fairs are often difficult, but since Vienna does not have the same density of local collectors such as London or Cologne, for example, I could not survive without them,” says Windhager.

Installation view Occupations of Uninhabited Space. Zsófia Keresztes, Jenine Marsh, Zoe Paul, 2017. Photo: Simon Veres
Installation view Occupations of Uninhabited Space. Zsófia Keresztes, Jenine Marsh, Zoe Paul, 2017. Photo: Simon Veres

As the dawn breaks on the third year of Gianni Manhattan’s sparky, engaged existence, Windhager is certainly sanguine about the challenges that face young galleries. In a political environment that is increasingly hostile to critical voices, Windhager understands that power comes in numbers and by banding together, like-minded galleries can have a greater impact. “I think most young art professionals are aware of how difficult times are at the moment,” she says. “I believe that the future will be a moment to work collaboratively, maybe also openly join forces and to reinforce the importance of cultural activity and critical thinking.”

by Josie Thaddeus-Johns

Josie Thaddeus-Johns is a writer and editor based in Berlin, covering art and culture. She writes for the New York Times, the Guardian, Frieze, and The Economist.

All images courtesy the artists and Gianni Manhattan, Vienna, Austria

More Information on Gianni Manhattan

Galleries (40)

Futura Art Gallery — Pietrasanta, Italy

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Misako & Rosen — Tokyo, Japan

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Tiwani Contemporary – London, Great Britain

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Frutta Gallery — Rome, Italy

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Contemporary Fine Arts – Berlin, Germany

From West to East and Back Again: a Berlin Institution That’s Made Its Mark

Bo Bjerggaard – Copenhagen, Denmark

Showcasing Figurative Painting With a Side of Communal Spirit

Pierre-Yves Caër Gallery – Paris, France

The Parisian gallery creating a home for Japanese artists in the European art market.

Blindspot Gallery — Hong Kong, China

Throwing a Spotlight on Local Artists

Vane – Newcastle upon Tyne, Great Britain

The Not-for-profit Space Offering Context And Critique In Newcastle

H’art Gallery — Bucharest, Romania

One of Bucharest’s Oldest Private-Run Galleries

LambdaLambda Lambda – Pristina, Kosovo

Mastering the Language in the Kosovan Capital

Deák Erika Galéria – Budapest, Hungary

Beyond Budapest’s Baths

The Breeder Gallery – Athens, Greece

Breeding New Forms in Athens

Tim Van Laere Gallery – Antwerp, Belgium

An autonomous gallery representing both upcoming and well-established artists

Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler – Berlin, Germany

One of the most cutting-edge galleries in Berlin

Galerie Fons Welters – Amsterdam, The Netherlands

A Doorway to Amsterdam’s Contemporary Art

Bosse & Baum – London, United Kingdom

Ambitious perspectives in Peckham

TM51 – Oslo, Norway

Three Galleries in One – Oslo’s Most Accessible Space

mfc-michèle didier – Paris, France

A Space that Reflects the Artistic Discipline

V1 Gallery – Copenhagen, Denmark

Challenging the Boundaries of Art

Upstream Gallery – Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Tackling the Shift Between the Analog and Digital in a Post Internet World

Galerie Forsblom – Helsinki, Finland

Bringing international contemporary art to the Finnish capital

The Journal Gallery – New York, USA

Saving New York from Becoming a Sale-Focused Gallery Wasteland

Peres Projects – Berlin, Germany

Bridging the Gap Between Los Angeles and Berlin

Galeria OMR – Mexico City

Mexico City’s advocate for modern artistic tendencies and international contemporary art

LOYAL – Stockholm, Sweden

A Gallery that Pushes the Dialogue Around Young and International Art in Sweden’s Capital

Chimera-Project — Budapest, Hungary

Post-contemporary interest in aesthetics while eagerly re-constructing and defining traditions

La New Gallery — Madrid, Spain

Celebrating contemporary art in all its multi-faceted forms

Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery – Sydney, Australia

Her uncanny ability to recognize unique Pacific Rim talent

Take Ninagawa Gallery – Tokyo, Japan

Promoting emerging Japanese artists within a cross-generational, international framework

RaebervonStenglin – Zurich, Switzerland

It is much more about concepts, long conversations and long-term commitment

Galerie Emanuel Layr – Vienna, Austria

Finding the right chord among the various artists

Platform China – Beijing/Hongkong, China

This shows how much prejudgment there still is

Fluxia – Milan, Italy

Strive to discover new approaches in contemporary art

Gaudel de Stampa – Paris, France

“Discreet” seems to be the perfect adjective

NON – Istanbul, Turkey

The dawn of an era of collaboration

Vermelho – São Paulo, Brazil

There were no galleries open to a new generation of artists working in a nontraditional way

Eleven Rivington – New York, USA

Newfound talent and rediscovers international artists for a new audience

Ibid. – London, Great Britain

Rather than listing names