Anna Gaskell
Ann Hamilton
Rebecca Horn
Sigalit Landau
Richard Long
Bruce Nauman
Danica Phelps
Sam Taylor-Wood
Vangelis Vlahos
Fabrice Gygi
Elisabeth Millqvist
Tessa Praun
Richard Julin
Fabrice Gygi has compared himself to a figurative painter in that he copies objects that he observes in the world around him. Gygi uses their characteristics in forms and materials but displaces their function and context. "Walking & Falling" works by: Anna Gaskell, Ann Hamilton, Rebecca Horn, Sigalit Landau, Richard Long, Bruce Nauman, Danica Phelps, Sam Taylor-Wood and Vangelis Vlahos.
Fabrice Gygi
Solo show
Curator: Richard Julin
Fabrice Gygi places riots barricades at museums, hangs up bombs so that they
resemble chandeliers, and makes a provisional voting booth for an undecided nation.
Artist Fabrice Gygi has compared himself to a figurative painter in that he copies
objects that he observes in the world around him. Gygi uses their characteristics in
forms and materials but displaces their function and context. At Magasin 3, the
rooms are filled with sculptures in industrial and military materials such as
stainless steel, tarpaulin, and tension straps.
Gygi critiques authoritarian systems in our culture by studying everyday
architecture and ordinary objects. He questions the police’s preparations ahead of
expected riots and our obsession with feeling secure. Fabrice Gygi was born in
Switzerland in 1965. He lives and works in Geneva. The solo show at Magasin 3
Stockholm Konsthall is his first exhibition in the Nordic countries. An exhibition
of Fabrice Gygi's works is currently showing at the Orange County Museum of Art in
Newport Beach, California. Recently his works have been shown separately at
Kunstmuseum St.Gallen and Musee d'art moderne et contemporain (Mamco), Geneva.
The exhibition is supported by Pro Helvetia - Arts Council of Switzerland
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Walking & Falling
Group exhibition with works by nine artists
Curators: Elisabeth Millqvist and Tessa Praun
Anna Gaskell (US), Ann Hamilton (US), Rebecca Horn (DE), Sigalit Landau (IL),
Richard Long (UK), Bruce Nauman (US), Danica Phelps (US), Sam Taylor-Wood (UK),
Vangelis Vlahos (GR)
“You're walking. And you don't always realize it,
but you're always falling.
With each step, you fall forward slightly.
And then catch yourself from falling.
Over and over, you're falling.
And then catching yourself from falling.
And this is how you can be walking and falling
at the same time."
Laurie Anderson from the album Big Science 1982
With each step you fall forward slightly. And then catch yourself from
falling. In Laurie Anderson’s quote, the everyday is paramount. Her
observation on walking, on how we unconsciously are falling with every step,
constitutes the point of departure for this exhibition, both as an observation and
as a metaphor for life. Our sense of balance, the precondition for our ability to
walk, also plays a central role in this exhibition.
The works in this exhibition have a poetic, contemplative, and surrealistic affinity
to her quote. Rebecca Horn was fascinated by the way a woman walked and created a
unicorn costume for her. During the early 1970s, Horn worked with costumes that
elongated the shoulders, fingers, or head and emphasized the body’s movements. In
“Walking 9-5 Amsterdam" (2001), Danica Phelps exchanges "working" with "walking."
She walked every day for a month from 9 am to 5 pm, an average workday. Bruce Nauman
has examined walking in a number of performance pieces — he has been stamping in his
studio, walked in an exaggerated manner and in various patterns. Vangelis Vlahos and
Sigalit Landau challenge our sense of balance. In Vlahos’s video “Untitled Knight 1"
(1997), a knight in shining armor roller-skates in a gymnastics hall, while Landau
stands balanced on a watermelon in the Dead Sea.
All the participating artists are represented in Magasin 3’s permanent collection
but several of the works have been borrowed for “Walking & Falling".
Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall
Frihamnen - Stockholm
Opening hours: Thur 12-7 pm, Fri-Sun 12-5 pm