Jonas Höschl is a political conceptual artist and photographer.
Most recently, he was awarded the Paula Modersohn-Becker Art Prize and the Bavarian Art Promotion Prize for Fine Arts for his artistic work, which encompasses the media of printmaking, sound, video and installation. He is part of the artist collective "Tannhäuser Kreis".
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And let my cry
2022
And let my cry @ EIGEN + ART Lab, Berlin, 2022 // Exhibition view by Peter Wolff "This criticism of journalistic reporting is repeated in his most recent work, And let my cry (2022): it is the transcript of an (internal) recording the Bavarian Broadcasting Company made during the setup and rehearsal for the memorial service for the victims of the racist attack in Munich’s Olympia shopping center in 2016. (...) False reports led to panic in the city, and despite the perpetrator’s unambiguous statements in chat forums, authorities long pointed to his psychiatric treatment as a motive for a supposed killing spree.", Mira Anneli Naß
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Europe is lost
2018
Europe is lost @ EIGEN + ART Lab, Berlin, 2022 // Exhibition view by Peter Wolff
Europe is lost @ EIGEN + ART Lab, Berlin, 2022 // Exhibition view by Peter Wolff
Europe is lost @ EIGEN + ART Lab, Berlin, 2022 // Exhibition view by Peter Wolff "Europe is lost (...) leaves an oppressive feeling. One photo shows a man whose face is completely masked, another wears dark sunglasses and smokes.", from the article "Nie wieder!" by Amelie Völker in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, July 05, 2020
Europe is lost @ EIGEN + ART Lab, Berlin, 2022 // Exhibition view by Peter Wolff
Woodcut series of 10 parts, edition 1/10, 50 x 70 cm
Europe is lost @ EIGEN + ART Lab, Berlin, 2022 // Exhibition view by Peter Wolff
Video & Soundpiece, 06:24 min
Viewing link for video & soundpiece on request -
Das Verschwinden der Haushälterin des Vaters von Alexander Kluge
2025
Ausstellungsansichten "Point of No Return" @ Galerie Anton Janizewski, 2025 // Fotografie Julian Blum For this textile piece, Jonas Höschl adapts the opening
and closing panels of Alexander Kluge’s episodic film Deutschland im Herbst. Kluge’s 1978 film speaks about the cultural climate in the years of RAF terrorism; the quote that precedes the film, however, actually dates from the final weeks of the Second World War and builds a historical arc from National Socialism to the German Autumn 1977. By reproducing the panels in an almost cinematic format, Höschl removes them from their context—suddenly the question of guilt comes into
focus, and the question whether political violence can be viewed in isolation as a purely moral problem.
Jonas Höschl
Das Verschwinden der Hauswartsfrau des Vaters von
Alexander Kluge (2025)
Acrylic + fabric
115 x 140 cm -
Schwarz Rot Geil X AVISO Magazin
2021
AVISO – Magazin für Kunst und Wissenschaft in Bayern (2/21) Thanks to Sabrina Zeltner, Johannes Nussbaum, Nick Romeo Reimann, Willelm De Haan, Sabrina Reuschl, Linda Sakallah, Tannhäuser Kreis, Spring Break Art Residency and AVISO Magazine.