Dieter Brasch, aus der Serie Fussball in Wien, 2021 © Dieter Brasch
Dieter Brasch, aus der Serie Fussball in Wien, 2021. © Dieter Brasch
Dieter Brasch, aus der Serie Fussball in Wien, 2021. © Dieter Brasch
Dieter Brasch, aus der Serie Fussball in Wien, 2021. © Dieter Brasch
Dieter Brasch, aus der Serie Fussball in Wien, 2021. © Dieter Brasch
Soccer Fields in Vienna
Exhibition
Galerie am Park Liniengasse 2A, 1060 Wien
4.—5.10.2025
Artists: Brasch Dieter
The exhibition shows soccer’s energy and investigates its future. Technology and society shape the future of the sport. For over a century people have been watching soccer in stadiums, and for over seventy years they have followed it on television. The sport has been improved in terms of comfort and technology, but its original elements remain: standing-room tickets, urinals, and raw emotions.

On the field, everything has become much more precise: the players are more athletic, and their playing is optimized by video analysis and sensors. The video assistant referee (VAR) supplies digital supervision. However, many fans miss the spontaneity of the past. Although soccer is a big business, the game itself remains archaic: a ball, two goals, and eleven players on each side.

Amateur soccer fields are still simple: no VAR, no AI, and only a referee and chalk lines. Perhaps that is the future. Photography, too, has changed: not only from analog to digital, but now to AI. However true pictures retain the elements that make soccer what it is: the unplannable, the moment, and the raw reality.

Attention: For details on accessibility, please contact the program partner directly.
Sat2–6 PM
Sun2–5 Pm
free entry
Artists: Brasch Dieter
The exhibition shows soccer’s energy and investigates its future. Technology and society shape the future of the sport. For over a century people have been watching soccer in stadiums, and for over seventy years they have followed it on television. The sport has been improved in terms of comfort and technology, but its original elements remain: standing-room tickets, urinals, and raw emotions.

On the field, everything has become much more precise: the players are more athletic, and their playing is optimized by video analysis and sensors. The video assistant referee (VAR) supplies digital supervision. However, many fans miss the spontaneity of the past. Although soccer is a big business, the game itself remains archaic: a ball, two goals, and eleven players on each side.

Amateur soccer fields are still simple: no VAR, no AI, and only a referee and chalk lines. Perhaps that is the future. Photography, too, has changed: not only from analog to digital, but now to AI. However true pictures retain the elements that make soccer what it is: the unplannable, the moment, and the raw reality.

Attention: For details on accessibility, please contact the program partner directly.
Dieter Brasch, aus der Serie Fussball in Wien, 2021 © Dieter Brasch
| 13—18 Uhr
The exhibition shows soccer’s energy and investigates its future. Technology and society shape the future of the sport. For over a century people have been watching soccer in stadiums, and for over seventy years they have followed it on television. The sport has been...
Opening hours:
Sat2–6 PM
Sun2–5 Pm
Address:
Liniengasse 2A
1060 Wien
art.magazine + Bildrecht GmbH + CENTRE DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE GENÈVE + Datum + Der Standard + Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation + EMOP + GOOD NIGHT VIENNA + Ö1 Club + Polnisches Institut Wien + Radio Rudina + Stadt Wien Kultur + Universität Wien + Wirtschaftsagentur Wien +   art.magazine + Bildrecht GmbH + CENTRE DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE GENÈVE + Datum + Der Standard + Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation + EMOP + GOOD NIGHT VIENNA + Ö1 Club + Polnisches Institut Wien + Radio Rudina + Stadt Wien Kultur + Universität Wien + Wirtschaftsagentur Wien +