DE

Exhibitions

SCHAU, SCHAU....!
21.10.2024 - 04.07.2025

Review
Events
Collection
The Kunsthaus
Information
Newsletter
Audioguide
Contact
Imprint
Privacy Policy
Logo Kunsthaus Kollitsch
DE
  • Afra Al Suwaidi
  • Maria Anwander & Ruben Aubrecht
  • Cornelia Baltes
  • Alfredo Barsuglia
  • Wolfgang Becksteiner
  • Lucile Boiron
  • Brandy Brandstätter
  • Julius Brauckmann
  • Christopher Bucklow
  • Natalie Czech
  • Ines Doujak
  • Simon Edmondson
  • Jan Paul Evers
  • Gernot Fischer-Kondratovitch
  • Andreas Fogarasi
  • Dorothee Golz
  • Vivian Greven
  • Lucy Ivanova
  • Anna Jermolaewa
  • Rohullah Kazimi
  • Soli Kiani
  • Herlinde Koelbl
  • Suse Krawagna
  • Eric Kressnig
  • Tina Lechner
  • Axel Lieber
  • Mevlana Lipp
  • Constantin Luser
  • Sissa Micheli
  • Marianne Oberwelz
  • Mohannad Orabi
  • Markus Orsini-Rosenberg
  • Aitor Ortiz
  • Max Peintner & Klaus Littmann
  • Margot Pilz
  • Megan Rooney
  • Heimo Setten
  • Toni Schmale
  • Esther Stocker
  • Wolfgang Tillmans
  • Mikhail Tolmachev
  • Martina Unterwelz
  • Karl Vouk
  • Maja Vukoje
  • Yunyao Zhang
© Ines Doujak © Ines Doujak Ines Doujak, Untitled, 2016
, Steel, papier mâché, wood, 131 x 55 x 60 cm
Kollitsch Collection

In her sculptures, collages, installations, photographs, films and performances, Ines Doujak explores topics such as colonialism, racialisation and the exploitation of human and natural resources as well as gender roles. The emergence of diseases, epidemics and pandemics has been a central theme of the artist’s work for years. In collages and sculptures made from papier mâché, she gives this theme a voice by showing bodies marred by disease.

© Ines Doujak © Ines Doujak Ines Doujak, Geistervölker, 2021
, Collage made from historical prints of botanical wall charts and medical textbooks, coloured, 148 x 93 cm
Kollitsch Collection

Ines Doujak lays bare the transcontinental interrelationships of industry, economy, culture and society and highlights their negative impact on the individual or on entire populations. Long before Corona hit, the artist had been studying the spreading of diseases along ancient trade routes. Under the heading of Geistervölker, a term used to describe cultures that disappeared form history, leaving barely a trace, she created collages containing elements from botanical and medical textbooks from the 19th century. The images merge human bodies marred by skin disease – growths, rashes and pustules – with animals and plants, creating entirely new visual worlds.

Biographie
KUNSTHAUS : KOLLITSCH
Deutenhofenstrasse 3
9020 Klagenfurt
Opening hours
Monday - Thursday:
8am - 5pm
and by appointment
Contact us
Kontakt Icon +43 463 26009 88
Mail Icon kunsthaus@kollitsch.eu
Newsletter
Audioguide
© 2025 KUNSTHAUS : KOLLITSCH GmbH