Brown Bag Lunch Talk: Beuys vs. the Goldsmiths: Symbolic Meltdown and the Kronschmelzaktion (1982)
25 January 2023, 1:00 pm–2:00 pm
Brown Bag Lunch seminars are only open to UCL History of Art staff and are designed to be an opportunity for us to hear about each other’s work, give feedback and engage in discussion. In this seminar, Dr Allison Stielau will be presenting her recent work to colleagues.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- UCL staff
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Allie Stielau – History of Art
Location
-
Seminar Room 420 Gordon SquareGordon SquareLondonWC1E 6BTUnited Kingdom
This talk revisits Joseph Beuys’ Kronschmelzaktion of 1982, in which the artist publicly melted down a jewel-encrusted crown to produce a new “symbol of peace” in the form of a golden hare. Beuys framed the transformation of crown to Friedenshase in alchemical terms, but it drew less on the mystical and more on the ordinary but still symbolically rich process of metallic reuse, which has a long history in Germany, among many other contexts. Viewing Beuys’s action from the perspective of the goldsmiths who collectively refused to participate in it brings deeper context to the noted controversy surrounding the event and sheds new light on the potential of metallic transformation as symbolic action in the monument wars of the twenty-first century.
Please note that this is an internal event that is open to UCL History of Art staff only.
Image: "Joseph Beuys with the replica of the crown of Ivan the Terrible, made from 1.6 kilograms of gold and numerous precious stones. From this material a new symbol of peace will be cast, a 20 cm tall hare. Photo taken during documenta 7 (1982)." Photo: Horst Ossinger. Courtesy Alamy.
About the Speaker
Allison Stielau
Lecturer in History of Art at UCL History of Art
More about Allison Stielau