Peter Noever

Peter Noever

Peter Noever (born May 1, 1941 in Innsbruck) is an Austrian designer and curator–at–large of art, architecture and media. From 1986—2011 he was the artistic director and CEO of MAK—Austrian Museum of Applied Arts and Contemporary Art in Vienna.

Life

Director Emeritus of the MAK Vienna / Los Angeles

1971 he founded the first concept store in Austria, “Section N” in the city of Vienna (architect: Hans Hollein)

From 1975 to 1993 lecturer of design analysis at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna.

In 1982 Peter Noever founded the architecture magazine “UMRISS” (–1994).

1986–2011 Artistic Director and C.E.O. of the MAK (Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art), Vienna / Los Angeles.

From 1988 to 1989 guest professor of museology at the Academy of Applied Arts, Vienna.

From 1989 to 1994 publisher and editor-in-chief of the architecture magazine UMRISS.[1]

From 1988 to 1993 initiator and Artistic Director of the general adaptation of the MAK. Commissions internationally renowned artists for the artistic intervention of the MAK’s permanent collection (with Jenny Holzer, Franz Graf, Manfred Wakolbinger, Eichinger oder Knechtl, Peter Noever, Barbara Blum, Günther Förg, Heimo Zobernig and Donald Judd). Noever implemented a radical new content and the general adaptation of the MAK.

Since 1997 Peter Noever belongs to the “Kurie für Kunst und Wissenschaft”, the most prestigious award for science and arts in Austria.

In 1994 Noever founded the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, with its Schindler Artists and Architects-in-Residence Program in West Hollywood (Los Angeles), adding to it the MAK program UFI – Urban Future Initiative in 2010. The activities of the MAK Center in Los Angeles unfold at three locations, all of them architectural icons designed by the pioneering Austrian-American architect Rudolph M. Schindler (1887–1953). The third Schindler building, the Fitzpatrick-Leland House on Mulholland Drive, was entrusted to Peter Noever in 2008 as a donation of film producer Russ Leland for the MAK Center in Los Angeles. Noever also initiated and artistically oversaw the renovation of the Kings Road House (Schindler House) in West Hollywood and the Mackey Apartments (which are used for the residency program). In 2010, he also—together with architects Michael Ferguson and Kirby Smith (Space International Inc.)—completed the Mackey Apartments’ new garage structure including the “Garage Top.”

2006 Founding of the Josef Hoffmann Museum, Brtnice, a joint branch of the Moravian Gallery in Brno and the MAK Vienna.

As an exhibition creator, Noever has conceived and/or curated over 350 exhibitions in Vienna as well as in Los Angeles, Venice, New York, Moscow, Tokyo, Berlin, Prague, Brtnice, Budapest, Shenzhen (China), St. Petersburg, Havana, and elsewhere.

The MAK satellite project CAT – Contemporary Art Tower (with artistic interventions by Jenny Holzer and James Turrell) for the flak tower at Vienna’s Arenberg Park could not be fully realized. The—in the meantime closed—Contemporary Art Tower of the MAK is home to a collection of contemporary art, architecture, and design. It includes works by over 60 renowned and pioneering artists, architects, and designers including Vito Acconci, Lebbeus Woods, Chris Burden, Walter Pichler, Franz West, Helmut Lang, Otto Mühl, Padhi Frieberger, Eva Schlegel, Rudi Stanzel, Hans Weigand, Manfred Wakolbinger Gregor Eichinger, Frank Gehry, Wolf Prix, Zaha Hadid, Günther Domenig, Heinrich Dunst, Georg Driendl, Raimund Abraham, Friedrich Kiesler, Hans Hollein, Gordon Matta-Clark, Ilya Kabakov, and Donald Judd.

Golden Lion for the Best National Participation at the 2014 Venice Biennale of Architecture for Crow’s Eye View: The Korean Peninsula. Peter Noever was part of the curatorial exhibition team of (South) Korea.

Peter Noever has overseen placement of over 20 sculptures in the public space and/or staged temporary public space interventions in Vienna, Los Angeles, and Venice. Most recently: Zaha Hadid, Trompe l’Oeil at the Winter Palace (City Palace) of Prince Eugene at the Belvedere, Vienna, 2015.

2014–2016 “Vienna for Art’s Sake!” and “Germany mon amour!” Archives of contemporary art (Austria and Germany) curated for Luciano Benetton’s collection “imago mundi”.

Peter Noever lectures at main universities and art institutions around the world. He lives and works in Vienna together with the jurist and cultural manager Elisabeth Noever-Ginthör. Together they have a daughter, Louisa Vita Noever. His daughter from his first marriage, Ixy Nova Noever, is ethnologist, film maker and university lecturer at the University of applied arts Vienna.

Exhibitions and lectures (selection)

September 22–24, 2012

Guest lecturer at various international universities in Europe, the USA and Asia (Selection)

Muncie, Indiana / Havana, Cuba / Cheboksary, Chuvashia, Russia / Kanazawa, Japan / Moscow, Russia / Kiev, Ukraine / Zurich, Switzerland / Prague, Czech Republic / Budapest, Hungary / Belgrade, Serbia / Nicosia, Cyprus / New York and Los Angeles Editor and author of numerous books, magazines and other publications on art, media, design and architecture.

Publications

exhibition at the Winter Palace, Belvedere Wien, 2015 with 161 artists, architects, designers „Vienna For Art’s Sake !’“ and 13 site-specific, artistic interventions (Vito + Maria Elena Acconci, Zaha Hadid, Magdalena Jetelová, Michael Kienzer, Hans Kupelwieser, Hermann Nitsch, Eva Schlegel, Kiki Smith, the next ENTERprise, Iv Toshain, Atelier Van Lieshout, Koen Vanmechelen, Manfred Wakolbinger

Decorations and awards

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References

  1. Official Website Peter Noever - Chronology
  2. "Reply to a parliamentary question" (pdf) (in German). p. 1030. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
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