Works 1969-2011 and the Yello Years. The show presents the work of Meier, the multi-talented artist from Zurich, as well as his activity as director of film video-clips.
“Oh Yeah” and “The Race” are two of the famous pieces. In the
1980s Dieter Meier became known to a large public as part of the
music duo YELLO, who are among the most influential electro-pop-
acts ever. His music videos for the group YELLO exerted a
sustained influence on the genre and could almost always be seen
on MTV. Far less known is the work of Dieter Meier as concept and
performance artist, the origins of which go back to the late 1960s.
The ZKM | Media Museum presents the work of Dieter Meier, the multi-
talented artist from Zurich, as well as his activity as director of film
video-clips.
Meier’s artistic origins are characterized by radical and absurd-humorous
situations, which have inspired him time and time again to direct
confrontations with passers-by in public squares: in 1970 he went to
Munich and toured the city for twelve hours marking the places through
which he had walked and where he stood or rested with a stamped clock
sticker; in the Lucerne Art Museum, visitors recorded on a time stamp
that they dedicate one or two minutes of their lives to me”, said Meier. At
the ICA London Meier showed a film instructing visitors to hold up to their
eyes the white, large sheet of paper which they were given at the cash
register for a period of ten minutes. “So, that was the film”, said Meier.
For a photographic project in 1976, Meier fashioned figures out of powder
sugar and Plasticine, before destroying them shortly afterwards. In the
same year, he exhibited 48 imaginary biographies in the Zurich
Kunsthaus.
Dieter Meier’s works were characterized by the phenomenon of time; his
actions were mostly announced and terminated with bureaucratic
precision. The seeming banality and irrationality of many of his actions
contrasted with the enhanced attitude of anticipation among the public.
And yet Meier consciously created the insignificant, contrasting the
desperate search for significance and artistic patterns of meaning with a
frenzied and radical “non-meaning”.
By the end of the 1970s, Meier had his fill of “art racing” and, together
with Boris Blank, founded the duo YELLO. With pieces such as “The
Race” or “Oh Yeah”, he celebrated the succuess of YELLO in the
international charts; many of the duo’s pieces were used during the
1980s for TV programs and feature films. In the music videos of YELLO,
Dieter Meier’s influence from the early works can be clearly seen: thus,
the Plasticine figures Meier refers to as “Lost sculptures” reappear in the
video “Pinball Cha Cha” (1982).
One year ago Dieter Meier opened his artistic archive for the first time for
the exhibition “en passant” in the Berlin project gallery space Grieder
Contemporary. The findings, thought to be partly lost, are now presented
at the ZKM in the exhibition “Dieter Meier. Works 1969–2011 and the
YELLO Years”, which could be viewed in the Falckenberg Collection in
the Deichtorhallen Hamburg, in 2011.
Biography:
Dieter Meier was born in Zurich, in 1945. In addition to his work as
musician and artist, Meier is an author (Hermes Baby, Ammann Verlag,
Zurich; Die Maske des Erzählers 2012, Kiepenheuer & Witsch),
Kinderbuchautor (Windjo, Limmatverlag, Zurich; Oskar - wie ein Tiger,
Kein & Aber, Zurich) and filmmaker (81'000 Einheiten, Jetzt und Alles,
Lightmaker). He was a professional poker player, designed clocks and
operates an organic farm in Argentina producing beef and wine. He sells
his products in Germany, the USA, Switzerland and in his shop for
Argentinian products in “Ojo de Agua”, Zurich.
Image: Dieter Meier, Works 1969–2011 and the YELLO Years. An exhibition at ZKM | Media Museum. JUMPS, 1974 © Dieter Meier / Datasound AG
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