Emmanuelle Antille
Christoph Büchel
Angela Bulloch
Phil Collins
Alicia Framis
Olaf Nicolai
Cady Noland
Costa Vece
Stephen Willats
Laura Lima
Judith Welter
Heike Munder
Laura Lima presents a selection of performative installations that focuses on the question of magic. Her works are experimental arrangements that explore the margins of our perception. Collection on Display: the current cycle focuses on functions, models, and interpretations of space and interiors in contemporary art.
Collection on Display
Emmanuelle Antille, Christoph Büchel, Angela Bulloch, Phil Collins, Alicia Framis, Olaf Nicolai, Cady Noland, Costa Vece, Stephen Willats
Curator Judith Welter
Collection on Display presents selected works from the collection of the Migros Museum für
Gegenwartskunst. The current cycle focuses on functions, models, and interpretations of
space and interiors in contemporary art. The installations, shown in three parts, address
specific spatial arrangements and their conceptualizations. In the second part, works by
Emmanuelle Antille, Christoph Büchel, Angela Bulloch, Phil Collins, Alicia Framis, Olaf
Nicolai, Cady Noland, Costa Vece, and Stephen Willats are on display. They examine the
participatory potential of architectures and the viability of social community and the individual
in space.
In recent decades, artistic involvement with issues of space has seen profound engagement in terms of
both content and form. In installational formats, very different spatial models are transferred from the
private as well as public domains into the exhibition space.
The works shown in the second part of the exhibition are closely related to the forms of institutional
self-reflection that characterize the history of the museum. In the 1990s, the era in which the Migros
Museum für Gegenwartskunst was founded, an important debate took place in the form of spatial settings
created by artists. The goal was to dispel fixed notions of the traditional museum via artistic interpretations
of what a museum should look like “today.” Great importance was ascribed to the idea of involving the
observer. This effort is evident, on the one hand, in spatial settings that prompt the observer to carry
out a particular activity or action. Many of the installations exhibited here are examples of practices that
can be grouped together under the term “participatory art.” On the other hand, the works on display
reflect on the social connection between spaces and their occupants as well, while also referring to the
concept of participation with this community interest on a meta-level.
--------
Laura Lima
Bar Restaurant
Curator Heike Munder
The artistic practice of Laura Lima (b. Governador Valadares, Brazil, 1971; lives and
works in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is defined by her fascination with the complexity of social
relations and forms of human behavior. Her scenarios, in which the human body is often
the central medium and driving force, combine performative components with a wide
range of media of artistic expression such as drawings, sculptures, and installations.
Lima herself never acts in her pieces, instead instructing selected protagonists to enact
her dramaturgic designs. The Brazilian artist’s first solo exhibition in Switzerland features
The Naked Magician (2008/10/13) and Bar Restaurant (2010/13), a selection of performative installations that focuses on the question of magic.
Laura Lima’s works are experimental arrangements that explore the margins of our perception
along the boundaries between reality, illusion, and fiction. In the works presented in Zurich, she
evokes mysterious worlds that revolve around the question of magic without raising it openly.
A slightly different version of The Naked Magician was on display in 2010 as part of the exhibition
Grande at the Casa França-Brasil, Rio de Janeiro. An apparently chaotic system of shelves—the
arrangement looks like frozen in mid-collapse—forms a installational framework in which a protagonist
executes Lima’s instructions. Dressed in a well-fitting suit—only the sleeves are far too short—he
imperturbably pursues occupations that remain opaque. A plethora of different objets trouvés sits
scattered across the slanted shelves—defying gravity—serving the performer as materials and
tools for his incessant activities, whose purposes are never explained but which nonetheless do
not seem arbitrary. The beholder becomes the observer of his creative actions a constant balancing
act between chaos and order, insanity and reason: complementary opposites that appear in an
inseparable union.
Lima’s second work, Bar Restaurant (2010/13), is set in a peculiar sort of bar: its furniture is
occupied not by people but by objects. Stacks of paper, sacks of flour, cylindrical figures and
rectangular solids in bright colors sitting on chairs, with full glasses of beer on tables arranged in
front of them that mysteriously empty over time. A protagonist playing the waiter busily refills the
glasses, maintaining the strange situation. Once again, the work sets up a scenario that evokes
associations of magical, ineffable, and sometimes absurd goings-on amid a perfectly “normal”
everyday setting.
Both pieces display aspects of rational order side by side with magical animation without passing
value judgment on either — especially in light of the booming interest in magic in the Western
popular media, which coexists uneasily with the rigorous rationalization of all realms of our lives,
that suggests a reading in which Lima’s works point up the dualisms of our time.
Laura Lima’s works have been presented at Art’s House, Melbourne, Australia (2013), the Ruhrtriennale,
Essen (2012), the Lyon Biennial, the Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm, and the Manchester Art Gallery
(all in 2011). Lima is also a cofounder and artistic advisor of the artist-run gallery A Gentil Carioca,
Rio de Janeiro.
Catalogue:
In conjunction with the exhibition, JRP|Ringier will publish a monograph produced in collaboration
with the Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm, and including essays by Sara Arrhenius, Victoria Noorthoorn,
Heike Munder, Jochen Volz and an interview with the artist.
Image: Laura Lima, The Naked Magician, 2008/10/13. Various materials
Press contact
René Müller, head of press and public relations: T +41 44 2772727 rene.mueller@mgb.ch
Opening: Friday, 22 November 2013, 6-8 p.m.
Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst
Limmatstrasse 270 - 8005 Zurich
Opening hours:
Tue, Wed, Fri 11 am – 6 pm
Thu 11 am – 8 pm
Sat, Sun 10 am – 5 pm
closed on Mondays
Admission:
Adults: SFR 12.-
Reduced: SFR 8.-
Groups of over 10: SFR 8.-
Free admission for pupils and young people under 16 years.