Museo Vostell Malpartida


The Museo Vostell Malpartida in the Spanish village Malpartida de Cáceres west of the provincial capital Cáceres in the Autonomous Community of Extremadura is dedicated to the work of the German painter, sculptor, Fluxus and Happening artist Wolf Vostell. The museum is under the artistic direction of Mercedes Vostell and under the general direction of José Antonio Agúndez García.. The Museo Vostell Malpartida was founded by Wolf Vostell and Mercedes Vostell in 1976.

History

In 1976 Wolf Vostell created a sculpture in Los Barruecos with his automobile, a black Opel Admiral from 1970 with which he had travelled with his family through Extremadura. The title of the sculpture is VOAEX and in 1978 he created the sculpture The dead who is thirsty . The 30th of october 1976 was the inauguration of the VOAEX sculpture and the foundation of the Museo Vostell Malpartida.
The floor space of the museum is about 14.000 m². The washhouse was operated in the 18th and 19th centuries; it is an interesting trade in which the wool was washed by the animals of the migratory herds with water from the pond Barruecos de Abajo of Extremadura. The house consists of several rooms in which different activities were carried out: Shearing sheep and weighing.
Since 1988 the german Goethe-Institut is collaborating with the museum. The collaboration started when Manuel Heredia supported Wolf Vostell in the 1980s in finding the 20 motorcycles of the brand Sanglas for Salvador Dalí's sculpture The end of the Parzival . Since then the Goethe-Institut is part of selected exhibitions, concerts and book releases.
In 1994 the government of Extremadura took over the complete renovation of the buildings. After Vostell's death in 1998, Mercedes Vostell became the artistic director of the museum. In 2005 the state government acquired the Vostell-archive for the museum. The Vostell-archive became an integral part of the Museo Vostell Malpartida. It serves art historians, journalists, students and all other people interested in art as a source of information.
The Museo Vostell Malpartida had 47,376 visitors in 2016 and was number 10 of 30 must-see museums in Spain, according to the National Geographic Society in Spain 2017. The Museo Vostell Malpartida was awarded the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts in 2018 by the Spanish Government.

Collections and exhibitions

Structure of the museum

The museum consists primarily of four parts. Three parts are permanent exhibitions from the collection of Wolf and Mercedes Vostell, as well as from the collection of the Italian art collector Gino Di Maggio, who specifically collected the art of the Fluxus artists. The third part contains temporary exhibitions of changing conceptual artists. The museum also includes the outdoor exhibition in the nature reserve Los Barruecos. The outdoor exhibition includes the sculptures VOAEX and in El muerto que tiene Sed.

Collection Wolf and Mercedes Vostell

The opening collection Wolf and Mercedes Vostell offers an extensive and varied tour through the selection of cycles by the founding artist. It consists of five works, which make up the special reference of this museum: Automobile-Fever , Fluxus-Buick-Piano , Endogene Depression, Requiem for the forgotten , The Breakfast of Leonardo da Vinci in Berlin
As objects, most of these parts contain elements of the fetishistic symbolism of the 20th century.
To all this belong five sculptures The Concrete Bulls , four large reliefs and paintings such as The Burial of the Sardine , The Billard Girls , Mythos Berlin and Estrella Seelenfreund.
In addition, the Wolf and Mercedes Vostell Collection has a large number of paintings like the cycles
El muerto que tiene Sed and VOAEX and the sculpture projects Icarus and Tanit, which attempt to offer a comprehensive tour of a selection of the artist's cycles. Also worth mentioning are the works Transmigration III, in which a television set is integrated, and Foreign mountain , with which Wolf Vostell began his production in Extremadura.
In the garden of the museum there is a 16 meter high sculpture by Wolf Vostell with the title
Why did the process between Pilate and Jesus take only two minutes? '', consisting of the fuselage of a Russian Mig-21 airplane, two automobiles, computer monitors and three pianos.

Fluxus Collection

The Fluxus collection was donated to the museum by the Italian art collector Gino Di Maggio in october 1996. Di Maggio established a personal relationship with the Fluxus artists, took care of their works and exhibited them first in the multipurpose room Multhipla and later in the Mudima Foundation.
The donation consists of a series of works, most of which are Fluxus actions and interventions, so that the photographs, videos, manifestos and various texts are the necessary additions to these bundles of files.
The exhibition comprises 250 works, installations, paintings and sculptures by 31 artists of European, North American and Asian origin who, since the late 1950s and 1960s, have synthesized the upheavals in all areas of culture in the Happening and Fluxus movements in favour of a renewal of the artistic field in an interdisciplinary and intermediary manner, transcending everyday life and as the seed of a fundamental social transformation.

Fluxus artists within the collection