Peter Aerschmann
Stefan Altenburger
Emmanuelle Antille
Balkan TV
Stefan Banz
Ursula Biemann
Olaf Breuning
collectif_fact
COM ir COM
Decosterd ir Rahm
Mark Divo
Christoph Draeger
Yan Duyvendak
Nicolas Fernandez
Sylvie Fleury
Iris Gallarotti
Laurent Goei
Marica Gojevic
Bob Gramsma
Herve Graumann
Andres Lutz
Anders Guggisberg
Thomas Hirschhorn
Teresa Hubbard
Alexander Birchler
Laurence Huber
Felix S. Huber
San Keller
Sabina Lang
Daniel Baumann
Jorg Lenzlinger
Gerda Steiner
Jerome Leuba
Zilla Leutenegger
Elena Montesinos
Frederic Moser
Philippe Schwinger
Gianni Motti
Bessie Nager
Shahryar Nashat
Yves Netzhammer
Nathalie Novarina
Marcel Croubalian
Luc Peter
Daniel Pflumm
Marco Poloni
Anne-Julie Raccoursier
Christophe Rey
Pipilotti Rist
Ugo Rondinone
Rebecca Sauvin
Katja Schenker
Daniel Schibli
Erik Steinbrecher
Sidney Stucki
Susann Walder
Ingrid Wildi
Simon Lamuniere
Among the large number of spaces specially dedicated to presenting videos, internet sites and multimedia projects, Swiss Art Videolobby is a unique video library which is conceived as real installation by curator Simon Lamuniere.
Artists:
Peter Aerschmann, Stefan Altenburger, Emmanuelle Antille, Balkan TV, Stefan Banz, Ursula Biemann, Olaf Breuning, collectif_fact, COM ir COM, Decosterd ir Rahm, Mark Divo, Christoph Draeger, Yan Duyvendak, Nicolas Fernandez, Sylvie Fleury, Iris Gallarotti, Laurent Goei, Marica Gojevic, Bob Gramsma, Herve Graumann, Andres Lutz / Anders Guggisberg, Thomas Hirschhorn, Teresa Hubbard ir Alexander Birchler, Laurence Huber, Felix S. Huber, San Keller, Sabina Lang / Daniel Baumann, Jorg Lenzlinger ir Gerda Steiner, Jerome Leuba, Zilla Leutenegger, Elena Montesinos, Frederic Moser ir Philippe Schwinger, Gianni Motti, Bessie Nager, Shahryar Nashat, Yves Netzhammer, Nathalie Novarina ir Marcel Croubalian, Luc Peter, Daniel Pflumm, Marco Poloni, Anne-Julie Raccoursier, Christophe Rey, Pipilotti Rist, Ugo Rondinone, Rebecca Sauvin, Katja Schenker, Daniel Schibli, Erik Steinbrecher, Sidney Stucki, Susann Walder, Ingrid Wildi.
Curator: Simon Lamuniere
You are cordially invited to the lecture by curator Simon Lamuniere on May 7, Friday, 4 p.m.
and the opening on May 7, Friday, 6 p.m.
Among the large number of spaces specially dedicated to presenting videos, internet sites and multimedia projects, Swiss Art Videolobby is a unique video library which is conceived as real installation by curator Simon Lamuniere.
For the past ten years Swiss artists, and especially those working in video, are among the most dynamic, singular and original. In Swiss Art Videolobby the emphasis is placed on the ‘younger generation’ of the 1990s and 2000s, who are no longer ‘pioneers’ or ‘musketeers’ of video, they have succeeded in finding their own language and developing original themes that make them true authors.
As an installation exposition seeks confrontation between the whole and the parts, architecture and furniture, video and its perception. In the space of the Videolobby, sixteen rows of seats are placed in parallel, alternatively back to back and face to face. Seven chairs are placed by a monitor set on a small table. A hostess responds to the public’s questions and hands them the DVDs. Two other monitors show looped videos; they are positioned at a certain height, one over the counter, the other discreetly in corner near a high table. There is also a vending machine dispensing drinks, a basket of fruit and daily newspapers available for the viewers.
The general display suggests a general waiting room or an airport lounge.
The reference to this sort of standardized space is, of course, not completely innocent. With the fear of attacks and the crisis in air travel, people's presence is constantly controlled, their movements watched, their luggage searched. If they are there in the first place it is with the intention of going somewhere for leisure or business. These spaces are transitional, and when passing through them everything becomes a source of interest. Because one has to wait, the smallest activity and detail catches one's attention. Thoughts circulate freely, by association, a little like at an exhibition. Reality is perceived differently.
A lobby space is simultaneously constraining and open: constraining because the furniture is stationary and organized, open because the public can sit as they choose. The formal meets the friendly and informal.
CAC, Vokieciu 2, LT- 01130 Vilnius, Lithuania
ph: + 370-5-2623476; fax: + 370-5-2623954