A Dialogue with the Visual Arts
The Centenary Poster Series
of the Salzburg Festival
The poster series including all 5 posters can be sent to your home. Please send an e-mail with the subject “Poster series” and your address to: info@salzburgfestival.at.
Payment by invoice.
Poster Prices
5 artist posters (= 59,4 cm x 84,1 cm): € 39,90
(The posters are available as set only)
shipping box: € 2,-
Postage:
Austria: € 5,-
EU: € 14
Overseas: € 20,-
William Kentridge
The South African artist William Kentridge staged Alban Berg’s Wozzeck for the Salzburg Festival in 2017, inviting the audience to enter his incomparable visual worlds including film, drawings and performance. For the anniversary, he designed the official 100-year logo. The subject of his poster refers both to his Wozzeck production and to the founding of the Salzburg Festival. In the upper left-hand corner, the word “WAR” appears, alluding directly to the founding of the Salzburg Festival shortly after World War I. The megaphone in the centre of the image is reminiscent of his Salzburg Wozzeck, which he set amidst the troubled times of World War I, but also of Nono’s quote which exhorts us to prick our ears.
Bob Wilson
The contribution by Bob Wilson is explicitly focused on the eyes, on seeing, on perception. The American artist contributed his suggestive lighting installations and characteristic productions to the Mortier era: for example Bartók’s Bluebeard’s Castle and Schoenberg’s Erwartung featuring Jessye Norman, Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande and Büchner’s Dantons Tod. For the summer of 2020, the Salzburg Festival had originally planned to revive his staging of The Messiah, which had its premiere at this year’s Mozart Week.
Jaume Plensa
In his works, the Catalan artist Jaume Plensa explores the importance of literature and science for humankind. They often refer to open-mindedness and inner reflection. Plensa’s mysterious sculpture at “Dietrichsruh” in Salzburg is widely known – at the Festival, he contributed to a spectacular production of Berlioz’ La Damnation de Faust together with the artist collective La Fura dels Baus at the Felsenreitschule in 1999.
Anselm Kiefer
The art projects of the Salzburg Foundation have also ensured the public presence of the German-Austrian artist Anselm Kiefer in Salzburg: his installation A.E.I.O.U. is located inside the pavilion right across from the Festspielhaus. His contribution to the Festival’s centenary is also about retrospection – about, in his own words, “the visualization of sedimentation and renewal in artistic creativity”.
Eva Schlegel
Last but not least, Eva Schlegel opens the windows, broadening our gaze towards the future – hopefully a bright future. Eva Schlegel has also designed a contribution to the State Exhibition Great World Theatre – 100 Years of the Salzburg Festival at the Salzburg Museum, exploring the complex relationship between words and writing, with a special focus on Austrian playwrights. This is not the first time the Austrian artist has worked for the Salzburg Festival: for the 2013 Festival summer, she created an installation at the Karl-Böhm-Saal and in the foyer of the Haus für Mozart and also designed the programme preview.