Loop
The Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein in Vaduz is pleased to announce the opening of a first large-scale museum exhibition of Monika Sosnowska, entitled "Loop".
Curated by Adam Budak
In her installations that echo the formal language of constructivist avant-garde, minimal and conceptual tendencies of the 60s and the 70s as well as a heritage of modernist architecture, Monika Sosnowska constructs a physical and conceptual labyrinth, a post-narrative, inner world of spatiality, staged in a sequence of interventions that emphasize space’s virtualities and potentials. Here, in this complex and powerful investigation of a spatial perception, a particular surgery is being applied to a body of space and its cultural articulation, architecture. The space and its parameters: size, dimensions, scale, plans, topology are being altered, shifted and possibly confused and manipulated in order to generate a very unique, unusual experience of spatial habitat and to sharpen our perception of it, outside of a common reality and its habits. With her intimate geometry, Sosnowska experiments with our senses and emotions, making us aware of psychosomatic, hidden qualities of s pace which in her highly performative installations are personified and animated. Between Kafkaesque oppression and a desire to liberate space, there is a sublime and uncanny spatial environment, rendered – sometimes very playfully - on the edge of dream-like imagery and an everyday familiar experience.
Sosnowska’s monumental architectural intervention, Loop, developed especially for the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein in a collaboration with one of the architects of the museum building, Christian Kerez - as a flexible but controlled space with its deconstructive drive and the rare processings of memory - is an attempt to confront modernist universalised patterns and to escape dimensions in a radical act of constructing a subjective space, a sensual, partly oneiric, mental shell of contemplation and desire. Welcome to a seance of a phenomenological spatio-therapy.
Monika Sosnowska was born in 1972 in Ryki, Poland. She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Poznan and the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, and currently she lives and works in Warsaw. Her recent exhibitions include shows at MoMA, New York, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Freud Museum Vienna, Serpentine Gallery London, De Appel in Amsterdam. Sosnowska participated in Manifesta 4 (Frankfurt), 8th Istanbul Biennale, Venice Biennale 2003. Monika Sosnowska will represent Poland at the forthcoming Biennale in Venice.
The catalogue, published on the occasion of the exhibition, contains text contributions by Will Bradley, Christian Kerez, Friedemann Malsch, Anthony Vidler, Jan Verwoert and Adam Budak as well as a rich visual material, including installation shots from the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein exhibition.
Monika Sosnowska’s "Loop" is accompanied by the programme of the following events:
Thursday, March 8, 2007, 6.00pm
"About Monika Sosnowska’s Loop"
Christian Kerez, architect, professor of architecture, ETH Zürich
Conversation
Thursday, March 15, 2007, 6.00pm
"Experiencing Architectural Spaces"
Konrad Wiesendanger, architect, Luzern
Lecture
Thursday, March 22, 2007, 6.00pm
"Last Year in Marienbad", 1961, dir. Alain Resnais
Screening
Thursday, March 29, 2007, 6.00pm
"Spaces, Cinema, Feelings. About the Work of Monika Sosnowska"
Jan Verwoert, art critic and writer
Thursday, April 26, 2007, 6.00pm
"Loop"
Monika Sosnowska in conversation with Adam Budak, exhibition curator
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1 February - 29 April 2007
Kein Ort
How concrete is a place in our mind? How graspable is a place when reproduced? Do places lose their sensual-haptic quality when abstracted, or can these places in particular develop such a quality? How do we perceive places? Today in particular, when our world is becoming increasingly digital. Non Spaces – places which belong to no one, which are only imagined, which were or are neglected; rooms that loose their tangibility, their physical quality, dissolve, or even take on a physical quality, a new reality. An exciting and at the same time harmonious presentation of artworks, among others, by James Lee Byars, Marcel Broodthaers, Otto Freundlich, Andreas Christen, Johann Heinrich Füssli, Fabian Marcaccio, Aurélie Nemours, Rita Mc Bride, Gerhard Richter and Thomas Ruff.
Press contact
René Schierscher Head Marketing und Communications schierscher@kunstmuseum.li
Opening, February 15, 2007, 6.00pm
Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein
Staedtle 32 P.O. Box 370 FL-9490 Vaduz
Museum opening hours
Tuesday - Sunday: 10 am. - 5 pm.
Thursday: 10 am. - 8 pm.
(Closed Mondays)
Admission
Adults CHF 8.00
Senior citizens, students, apprentices
Children, 6-16 years old,
Groups of 10 and more, CHF 5.00 per person