In 2021, the study "The rise and fall of rationality in
language" was published. In the face of the so-called "post-truth" era, a language analysis of various text forms is used
to describe and examine the change from a rationally oriented language to one in which emotion is at the centre. Inka Meißner's
texts deal with these positivist insights in an experimental way, incorporating them into a daily form of writing that is
shaped by an engagement with experimental literary movements of the last 50 years as well as by an examination of writing
as an artistic practice.
Michael Franz's drawings are less about the resulting artefact as an aesthetic object
than about the drawing as a carrier of information, as a "record" of everyday systemic and technological shifts.
In What
Time is Love?, these two attempts to address the tendencies towards derealisation in our time come together without comment,
in a kind of diary without beginning or end.
BOOK PRESENTATION
in the course of the finisage of the exhibition dysfunctional
malappropriation
January 11, 2025, 3-6 pm
Angewandte University Gallery Heiligenkreuzerhof
Sala Terrena
Schönlaterngasse 5 / Grashofgasse 3
1010 Vienna
Artist Talk
Monika
Stricker (Brussels, Düsseldorf) with Inka Meißner
FINNISAGE of the EXHIBTION
dysfunctional
malappropriation
Valentin Just, Morag Keil, Hans-Christian Lotz, Monika Stricker, Tanja Widmann, Kathrin
Wojtowicz,
curated by Inka Meißner
final event: 11 January 2025, 3–6 pm
University Gallery
of the Angewandte, Sala Terrena
Artist Talk
Monika Stricker, artist
with
Inka Meißner,
author and curator
What Time is Love?
Michael Franz, Inka Meißner
New Toni Press,
2024
ISBN: 978-3-9822378-6-2
To the book