Occupied space and the body in its cultural context are central to Schinwald's works as foundational elements for transformation and manipulation. He has worked in a variety of media: painting, sculpture, film, performance, and large, site-specific installations. His work "is centered on the body as a cultural construct, as an incessantly actualized site at which the subject is constituted both in its identity and its instability and transversality. He is not true to one medium, but rather nomadic as he appropriates methods and/or devices from cultural theory, film, and poetry, among others. Dysfunctionality and disorder are key notions in his work." Schinwald's early training in fashion and costume history often becomes apparent in his work. One of his earliest pieces, Jubelhemd (1997), hovers between straight jacket and formal wear. The arms have been sewn in upside-down, provoking an ambivalent gesture reminiscent of both surrender and celebration, with hands to the sky. In his work, Schinwald creates a precarious, at times unsettling, atmosphere. He equips the subjects of his 19th century portraits with peculiar veils, supports, wires and bandages, which the artist perceives as "prostheses for unspecified cases." Schinwald first began his over-painted portraits in the late 1990s, and has been a reference point for later work by artists like Hans-Peter Feldman, who imposes clown-noses onto oil portraits in a similar manner. Together with a team of conservators, Schinwald developed a technique in 2011 for integrating historical paintings into large canvases, extending the original work which, in effect, alters not only the scale of the artwork, but blurs the lines of the inserted image's historical and contextual fixity. Since 2019, Schinwald further accentuates this body of work with additions that reference the digitized world, incorporating technoid blurs of pixels and vertical purple lines suggestive of numerical glitches on a computer. Like his manipulated paintings and black-and-white portraits, Schinwald's installations and spatial interventions, (for, among others, SFMoMA, Yvon Lambert Gallery, and Migros Museum) embrace constraints and compulsions. Representation and actuation often overlap in his work, whether it be the display of possible prosthetics with historical paintings, or manipulated table-leg sculptures with a choreographed performance. In 2013, a terrarium model at the
Palais de Tokyo, Paris served as both model and overture to a companion exhibition, an extensive, mid-career survey, at
CAPC Bordeaux, Since 1999, Schinwald has also worked collaboratively with dancer Oleg Soulimenko on the Stage Matrix series, which has toured worldwide and been performed at, among others,
Performa 07,
Moderna Museet, and the Tanzquartier, Vienna. In 2015, Schinwald choreographed a piece for the
Royal Swedish Ballet. From 2012 to 2018, Schinwald was the Vice President of the
Vienna Secession. Together with Thomas D. Trummer and
Hans Ulrich Obrist, he is also curator of the EVN Collection in Austria. ==Exhibitions==