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> More information about Kerim Seiler, Thomas Kiesewetter and Melli Ink |
Sculpture TrailManfred Pernice, Sylvie Fleury, Erwin Wurm, Lutz Guggisberg, Kerim Seiler, Daniel Silver, Thomas Kiesewetter, Krysten Cunningham, Melli InkJune 1 – August 30, 2008 |
Sculpture Trail Manfred Pernice, Sylvie Fleury, Erwin Wurm, Lutz Guggisberg, Kerim Seiler, Daniel Silver, Thomas Kiesewetter, Krysten Cunningham, Melli Ink June 1 – August 30, 2008 |
> More information about Kerim Seiler, Thomas Kiesewetter and Melli Ink |
Press Release English Pressetext Deutsch Open: Friday and Saturday 14:00-18:00 And by prior arrangement
To mark the beginning of summer, Grieder Contemporary has pulled together a selection of sculptures revealing a spectrum of attitudes towards the present. The exhibition features artists of various nationalities who leverage a range of strategies both to connect with and challenge the modernist origins of sculpture. All oscillate between the twin poles of static fixedness and dynamic movement. Drawing attention to the collection with its bright neon lighting outside the building is the installation by the young Swiss, Kerim Seiler. His Pneuma Somnambul (2007) threatens to disrupt the placid neighbourhood, its graphic, signal-like fragments reminiscent of unquiet cityscapes that allow no one any peace. For her part, Sylvie Fleury takes a page out of nature’s book, the materiality of her colossal metallic Mushrooms (2008) on the lawn forging a link with Minimalism. The gleaming surface is tempting to the touch – it wills the visitor to experience this artificial sculpture in nature in all its tactile dimensions. Inside the gallery, the American John Miller – who now resides in Berlin – pursues the notion of sculpture as a relic in its classic role. Verliebt in Berlin (2007) is a gilded assemblage of sword, helmet and other items presented on an old wooden table. The work calls to mind an alluring battlefield caught unawares by a volcanic eruption. With this rigid composition, Miller is creating a perplexing distance and inviting the visitor to play the archaeologist and investigate the finds. British artist Daniel Silver is also attempting to stop the linear passage of time. He has placed five marble and soapstone heads in the room in an allusion to the traditional sculptures of antiquity. The unknown and misshapen faces only distantly resemble human physiognomies. They sit heavily in the space as if witnesses to tragic events, the nature of which even the artist will not reveal. Silver travelled to Zimbabwe to conduct research into the origins of modernist sculpture. Melli Ink’s Apocalyptic Riders 1-4 (death) (2007) are witnesses as well. The vitreous skeletons speak of the fragility of human life. Ink trained as a stage designer, and here she has created a devotional scene that throws the notion of Memento Mori into a different light, giving it a contemporary interpretation. The exhibition features works by Krysten Cunningham (*1973), Sylvie Fleury (*1961), Melli Ink (*1972), Thomas Kiesewetter (*1962), Lutz/Guggisberg (*1968/66), John Miller (*1954), Kerim Seiler (*1974), Daniel Silver (*1972), Erwin Wurm (*1954), Peter Rogiers (*1967). |