LONDON.- Acute Art announced that Daniel Birnbaum will be joining its growing team as Director. Birnbaum, who currently holds the position of Director at Moderna Museet in Stockholm, will move to London where the company is based, and take up his position next year.
Having launched in 2017, Acute Art has built its reputation on producing virtual reality artworks for artists including Marina Abramović, Anish Kapoor, Olafur Eliasson, Jeff Koons and most recently Christo. Alongside its role as a producer of digital artworks, Acute Art is also a research hub and curatorial laboratory, committed to giving artists access to the most cutting-edge technologies, and exploring new ways to reach audiences with digital art.
In this newly created role, Birnbaum will focus on identifying opportunities to continue bringing digital artwork to the public, both within an institutional framework and online through a curated offer on Acute Arts website and app. He will deepen the companys ongoing commitment to realising artistic vision in digital mediums, by collaborating with and commissioning artists, directing the companys exhibiting programme and establishing and leading the expert research hub, focussed on the use of future technologies in artistic practice.
Daniel Birnbaum is a philosopher, critic, and curator known for his playful and experimental curation, stretching the boundaries of what a museum does and putting artists and their ideas first. Birnbaum has been the Director of Moderna Museet, Stockholm, since 2010. He was previously the Director of the Städelschule, Frankfurt, Europes most experimental art academy whose recent graduates have included Tomás Saraceno, Danh Vo and Anne Imhof. He was Artistic Director of the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009 for which he received significant acclaim for introducing new artists and revisiting previously overlooked artists, such as Lygia Pape and the Gutai Group. He curated the first and second Moscow Biennial in 2005 and 2007, the Yokohama Triennial in 2008, judged the Turner Prize in 2008 and has been a contributing Editor of Artforum since 1998.
Recently, Daniel co-edited More than Real, Art in the Digital Age as a companion to the Verbier Art Summit, featuring contributors including artists Ed Atkins, Douglas Coupland and Olafur Eliasson on the intersection of art and technology. Birnbaum is also collaborating with the online journal e-flux Architecture for Are Friends Electric?, considering the possibilities of VR, AR and other technologies in the arts.
Daniel Birnbaum, in-coming Director, Acute Art, said: I have had the great privilege to lead one of the best art schools, an exemplary museum of modern art and the most legendary of biennials. It is therefore a good moment to leave the old institutional world and move into an unknown territory. Acute Art is a new kind of institution and is fastbecoming a leader in the field of art and technology. This move marks an adventure, a journey in to the future.
There is a voracious appetite for technology in the arts and I am curious to see what artists will do with these visual technologies. I am also excited by the opportunity for creative exchange with those that I have worked with in more traditional settings. In some ways, this move brings me back to what I find most exciting- closely collaborating with artists.
Jacob De Geer, CEO, Acute Art, said: We are proud to welcome Daniel Birnbaum to Acute Art, and look forward to this exciting next phase for the company. Daniels experience and creative vision is second to none, at once lucid, experimental and brave. His appointment to this newly created role will guide our work, as we focus on developing our curated offer of the best digital art. Under Daniels leadership we will also continue to research and collaborate closely with artists, helping to expand the creative possibilities for technology in artistic practice.
Hans-Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director, Serpentine Galleries, said: "The appointment of Daniel Birnbaum at Acute is very exciting news! Daniel has been a philosopher in exile ever since I got to know him in 1993. Philosophy needs other discursive fields to develop its concepts and to make them productive.
With his immense wealth of knowledge and passionate drive Daniel has pushed the boundaries of the traditional art institutions and is now moving into new experiments with Art and Technology. I cant wait to continue our many collaborations in these new spheres. It has only just begun
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