Marc Bauer
Sharyar Nashat
Pierre-Philippe Freymond
Christian Vetter
Cyril Chapuisat
Gregory Chapuisat
Isabel Fluri
Subsequent to the Mahjong exhibition (2005), efforts were made to organize an artists' exchange with China. As of 2007, with the help of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei an apartment-studio was set up in Beijing and made available for six months at a time to young Swiss artists. This group exhibition presents the artistic fruits of their experiences.
Curateb by Isabel Fluri
Concept by Kathleen Buhler
Subsequent to the "Mahjong" exhibition (2005), efforts were made to organize an artists' exchange with China. As of 2007, with the help of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei an apartment-studio was set up in Beijing and made available for six months at a time to young Swiss artists. Over a period of two years, the GegenwART foundation and its patron Dr. h.c. Hansjörg Wyss supported this initiative and financed the stay of five artists/artist-couples there.
These included the Geneva artists Marc Bauer, Sharyar Nashat and Pierre-Philippe Freymond, the Zurich artist Christian Vetter and the artist-brothers Cyril and Gregory Chapuisat from Founex. This group exhibition presents the artistic fruits of their exciting experiences, and also includes works by the artist Ana Roldan, who trained in Berne, is resident in Zurich and lived in the studio of the City of Zurich in Kunming for six months in 2008.
The sojourn in China made a lasting impression on all seven artists and is reflected in their work in different ways. The numerous large building-sites, the most striking expression of the fundamental change which the Middle Kingdom is undergoing, left a particular mark. Pierre-Philippe Freymond's photographs, for example, convey his preoccupation with the demolition of whole districts, the churned-up earth and the ever higher buttresses; Sharyar Nashat made a film about the casting of a concrete column; and the Chapuisat brothers again show themselves to be masters of sculptural and architectural spatial transformation. Christian Vetter's large paintings and cycle of drawings even display a fundamental change of style and theme, away from colour and towards abstraction. Ana Roldan, by contrast, engaged conceptually with Chinese history and with the importance of China as an economic power.
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Opening: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 18h30
Kunstmuseum Bern
Hodlerstrasse 8-12, Bern
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Wednesday to Sunday 10 - 17h
Mondays closed