The exhibition
shows painting, sculpture, photography and video art thematically, thus
cutting across generations and classifications. The show centres around
recent acquisitions.

Opening
of the exhibition by Dr. Götz Adriani, Dr. Manfred Gentz, Dr. Renate
Wiehager
Classical Modern
Art and ZERO
The group of Classical
Modern works in the Daimler Art Collection, started in 1977 by the
purchase of a painting by Willi Baumeister in 1977, includes mainly
painting, but also sculpture, wall objects and graphics. They present
an image of the development of art to the 1960s, relating mainly to
South-West Germany. ›Zero‹ and ›Neue Tendenzen‹ (New Tendencies) as
European movements connected to international Minimalism are represented
in the Daimler Art Collection by names like Enrico Castellani, Getulio
Alviani, Jan Henderikse, Almir Mavignier, Francois Morellet, Jan Schoonhoven
and Klaus Staudt.
Minimalism in Europe
and America
The major abstract
movements from the 50s to the 70s are characterized by going back to
the origins of a concrete, constructive and minimalist art, though with
different stresses in Europe and America. Connections between European
structural-constructive painting with American tendencies - Minimal
Art, Color Field Painting. Hard Edge, Op Art - are clearly shown in
the collection in works by Adolf Fleischmann, Hartmut Böhm, Andreas
Brandt, Ulrich Erben, Gottfried Honegger, Günther Fruhtrunk, Karl Gerstner,
Manfred Mohr, Anton Stankowski.