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Thursday, May 15, 2025 |
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Kunsthaus Zurich presents Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist retrospective and new works |
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Pipilotti Rist, The Patience, 2016. Video installation. Exhibition view Kunsthaus Zürich, 2016. Photo: Lena Huber, Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Luhring Augustine.
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ZURICH.- From 26 February to 8 May 2016 the Kunsthaus Zürich presents an exhibition by Pipilotti Rist. The Swiss artist, who is admired worldwide for her video installations and objects, will be transforming the more than 1,000 square metres of the large exhibition gallery into one big installation. Early works will appear alongside new pieces specially created for the Kunsthaus.
Pipilotti Rist (b. 1962) is a pioneering figure in video art who has achieved international fame with her sensual and audacious video installations that tackle conventions and taboos in an entertaining, ironic and self-confident way.
EARLY WORKS AND NEW PIECES FROM FOUR DECADES
The exhibition presents key works from the beginning of Rists international career, including the early single-channel videos with which she became known in the 1980s. The large-scale video installation Worry Will Vanish Horizon from 2014 will be receiving its first showing in Zurich, as will a new, large-format work created specially for the Kunsthaus: Pixelforest (2016). As in her other works, light, colour and the viewers own movements play a central role in this installation. The Pixelforest consists of 3,000 LED lights suspended in space on strands of cable that merge into a magical image forest which visitors can wander through. Each LED is individually controlled by a video signal, so that the forest of lights is constantly changing: like a screen exploding in space, as the artist herself describes it.
INTERVENTION EXTENDS INTO THE PUBLIC SPACES
Curator Mirjam Varadinis, who has worked closely with Pipilotti Rist to set up the more than 1,000-m2 exhibition and select a total of 41 works, has some unconventional perspectives in store. Sometimes lying on the floor, visitors will themselves become part of the sensual installations. Rist challenges our senses and draws us into a colourful and highly imaginative world. Playfully and humorously, she reflects on questions of perception and addresses feminist issues at the same time. Elaborate technology encounters small and loving gestures. With installations such as The Innocent Collection (1985ca. 2032) and Nothing (1999), the Pipilotti Rist exhibition also extends to spaces outside the exhibition gallery: to the Heimplatz and the café in the entrance hall of the Kunsthaus. Here, Rist introduces a poetic touch and interrogates the functions and processes that are taken for granted in the museum context.
TACTILE LIGHTS FOR THE GLASS ROOF AND A RELIEF ON THE KUNSTHAUS FAÇADE
Also visible in the public spaces are the Tactile Lights (2016). These were developed by the artist in close cooperation with the Kunsthaus Zürich specially for the historic glass roof over the entrance hall of the Kunsthaus building by Karl Moser (1860-1936) and for one of the reliefs Amazon Battle (1910) by Carl Burckhardt (1878-1923) on the façade. The installation in the roof space, with its moving lights, is designed to make an impression from outside, and can be seen from the Heimplatz and the adjoining site at night. It covers an area of several hundred square metres of glass together with the steel construction beneath and is visible far and wide during the night at certain times. The associated video projection is directed at one of the five neoclassical reliefs. The relief in question, on the north-west façade, depicts an Amazon who is fighting with a Greek and is set free by the projection. This commission for the Kunsthaus collection has been produced and acquired with the support of Swiss Re Partner for contemporary art.
APP AND PUBLICATION, NEW PERFORMANCE
The exhibition is accompanied by an interactive app with audioguide and a catalogue in English and German (Snoeck, 168 pages, 117 ill., CHF 49 in the Kunsthaus shop). The publication is structured as a glossary, illuminating the key issues in Pipilotti Rists work in alphabetical order with short texts from a wide array of authors. In addition to familiar writers such as Martin Suter and Elisabeth Bronfen, there are also contributions from a CERN researcher and children. The artist herself has supplied a number of poems, some of which are being published for the first time. Twelve detachable plates that can be removed from the book allow readers to continue the exhibition experience after their visit.
A unique on-site experience will be a performance by Eugénie Rebetez (b. 1984), one of Switzerlands leading young dancers and choreographers. She first came to public attention in Zimmermann & de Perrots Öper Öpis, and acted, danced and sang her way into the hearts of a wide audience with the irrepressible female character of Gina. The performance at the Kunsthaus is a new production and is being developed in cooperation with Pipilotti Rist. It takes place on 14 April at 7 p.m. and 16/17 April at 2 p.m. in the exhibition. Attendance is included in the price of admission to the exhibition.
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