EDINBURGH.- Famous for his architectural interventions into museum spaces, Schneider has created for
Summerhalls imposing and ominous lower basement rooms, a strong, deeply intense and, perhaps controversial, statement about racism and slavery.
Visitors to Süßer Duft enter the space alone and are emerged in an artwork that for many will be far from a comfortable experience but will also be unforgettable.
Schneiders previous works and installations such as Haus u r (1985 present day), Totes haus ur (2001) in Venice (where he won the Golden Lion Prize), Die Familie Schneider (London, 2004), Weisse Faulter (2007) and END (2008) have established him as one of the foremost artists working in Europe today and one not afraid of tackling controversial or even taboo subjects.
Please note that this installation is open only to those over 18 and includes nudity.
The Vanity Press
Banners presentation at Summerhall premiers new film works and recent publications with a focus on performance.
Three video works will be shown for the first time: Mirror, Janes and Chinook, the latter capturing a Chinook helicopter performing an absurd yet beautiful aerial ballet. The films will be shown alongside neons and other works relating to Banners fascination with flight and aircraft.
Publishing, in the broadest sense, is at the heart of British artist Fiona Banners practice. In 1997 she started working under the imprint The Vanity Press, and has since published an extensive archive of books, objects and performances, many questioning the notion of authorship and copyright.
For Banner, the act of publishing is itself a performative one. Consequently, her work resists traditional notions of grandeur and exclusivity, instead deploying a pseudo-formality that is at once playful and provocative.
In 2010 Banners intervention in Tate Britain, where she installed a Harrier Jump Jet on its nose and a Jaguar XZ118 fighter plane on its back, became the most visited exhibition in the UK that year. She was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 2002 and is regarded as one of Britains foremost working artists.