Solo show
Pipilotti Rist will create a kind of domestic fantasy for her exhibition at Hauser & Wirth Zürich. The
ground floor galleries will be transformed by the artist into her dream living room — a space
whose walls, floors and furnishings are alive with images. Rist’s video installations take many
guises. She has likened them in the past to handbags, 'because there is room in them for
everything: painting, technology, language, music, lousy flowing pictures, poetry, commotion,
premonitions of death, sex and friendliness.' From this versatile, capricious medium Rist draws
inner and outer worlds of kaleidoscopic colour and wonderment.
Lightboxes, intricate 'video-objects' and still images printed on a variety of materials in the room
fabricate a multi-layered interior: a living space which opens itself up to reveal other vistas. Within
this she creates an arena in which the viewer is invited to dance. Music and light effects cohabit
with domestic furnishings to form a 'living room disco' — a concept that the artist would like
visitors to apply to their own homes. Her art conjures positive energies that bring about social
change, dissolving the boundaries between public and private space.
The imagery in the
installation mostly comes from footage the artist shot during the making of her first feature film
Pepperminta (2009), which will be launched in Switzerland in September. It is as if, Rist has said,
'the film came into the room and deposited itself within.' This pollination of a screen fiction into the
viewer’s physical surroundings is typical of her works which marry visual with haptic experiences
and impart intellectual discovery through the senses. 'I treat artworks as philosophical statements
themselves,' Rist has said, 'expressed in a tool other than language.'
Pleasure and humour are central to Rist’s work. Her heroine Pepperminta is an indomitable being
who aims to free the world of fear. The bodies in her films are enticingly free. That they are female
and often her own turns, the viewer into voyeur. Titles are propositions and incantations,
encouraging a fuller engagement with life: the gigantic immersive installation Pour Your Body Out
(7354 Cubic Metres) (2008 – 2009) solicited and received physical participation from the
thousands of people who visited it in MoMA’s Marron Atrium.
Operating on an entirely different
scale, in this exhibition Enlight My Space (2008), a shelf filled with bric-a-brac, is intimate and
fragile, incorporating a book laid open at a cross-sectional illustration of a pregnant woman; its
title combining with the piece’s material components and flickering projected image to form a
tender meditation on how what we let inside can utterly transform one’s life.
Large or small, unifying or splintering into a host of different elements, Rist’s installations are
expansive, finding in the mind and body the possibility of endless discovery. She explains: 'The
idea is that now we’ve explored the whole geographical world, pictures or films are the new,
unexplored spaces into which we can escape.'
The feature film Pepperminta will be launched in cinemas on 10 September.
Pipilotti Rist (b. 1962) lives and works in Zürich and the mountains of Switzerland. Since emerging
on the international art scene in the mid-’80s, Rist has had numerous solo and group exhibitions
and is one of the most celebrated video artists working today. In 1997 she was awarded the
Premio 2000 for outstanding achievement at the Venice Biennale for her audio video diptych, 'Ever
is Over All' (1997). She represented Switzerland at the 51st International Biennale di Venezia in
2005. Recent solo presentations of her work include 'À la belle étoile', Centre Pompidou, Paris
(2007); 'Gravity Be My Friend', Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall (2007); 'YuYu', MIMOCA
Marugame Genichiro-Inokuma Museum of Contemporary Art (2008); 'Pour Your Body Out (7354
Cubic Metres)', MoMA, New York (2008 – 2009); and 'Elixir: the Video Organism of Pipilotti Rist',
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam (2009), which will travel to KIASMA Museum for
Contemporary Art, Helsinki, in September. An exhibition at Paço das Artes and MIS Museu da
Imagem e do Som, Sao Paulo, opens in October. She recently was awarded the Joan Mirò Prize
2009 for her wide-ranging creative activity and her outstanding contribution to the current artistic
scene.
Opening: Friday 28 August 2009, 5 – 8 pm
Galerie Hauser & Wirth
Limmatstrasse 270 - Zurich
Free admission