
Th 18.6.2026
6.00 pm - 9.00 pm
kex—kunsthalle exnergasse
B
POETRY FOR PRIDE 2026 - Vienna Vibes
As part of the “Synergies of Solidarity” festival by Queer Art Spaces Vienna the association hint.wien presents an evening of highly intersectional queer poetry and storytelling to mark Pride 2026. JG Danso and friends of the Queer Writers Circle Vienna return to kex— for their 6th Edition of “POETRY FOR PRIDE”. They will share multilingual works to celebrate VIENNA PRIDE and their upcoming anthology VIENNA VIBES.
Please note that there will be photography at this event. By attending, you give permission to be photographed.
Artists: Danilo Andrés, Atabey fka Carlos Maria Romero, Feministisches* Bloco Descolonial, Zosia Hołubowska, Otto Krause & Milan Loviška, Nina Sandino, Kia Sciarrone, Anita Steinwidder
Curated by Dorian Bonelli and Frederik Marroquín
after the last ready-made is part of the art and community festival “Synergies of Solidarity” organized by Queer Art Spaces Vienna. Within the festival queerness is conceived not as an identity but as a strategy for encountering our turbulent times through artistic and collective ideas drawn from the community.
Festival Management and Head of Queer Art Spaces Vienna: Michael Kaufmann and Jasmin Hagendorfer
The exhibition after the last ready-made focuses on textile work, crafting and sensitive creative processes. The ready-made once marked a radical gesture: the moment an ordinary manufactured object could be displaced, renamed, and reimagined as art. A century later, the logic of ready-made commodities has become the logic of everyday life. Our clothes, our identities, even our desires are “off the rack” and offered to us as standardised, readily available, and endlessly replaceable objects.
after the last ready-made gathers queer artists working with textiles, garments, and material practices to question this condition. Clothing resides at the intersection of body, industry, and self-invention. It is one of the most intimate interfaces between mass production and personal identity. In the era of fast fashion, garments are produced through global systems of extraction, exploitation, and waste.
Opposing this regime of standardised identities and commodities, the works in this show slow down, share, repair, and shapeshift into new forms of belonging.
Queer practice has long understood identity not as something given but as something made – improvised, altered, and continuously negotiated. In this sense, the exhibition does not simply declare the end of the ready-made object. It asks what comes after: when bodies refuse standardized forms, when materials are reworked rather than consumed, and when fashion becomes a space of collective imagination as opposed to disposable production, when our chosen second skin becomes sensitive again.
Funded by WASt, Wiener Antidiskriminierungsstelle für LGBTIQ-Angelegenheiten, ÖH Uni Wien.
Supported by Schlumberger.










