The Lower Saxony Savings Bank Foundation awards the 2009 Kurt Schwitters Prize for Visual Art to: Tacita Dean. To mark the occasion, the Sprengel Museum Hannover proudly presents the German premiere of the artist's six film installation Merce Cunningham performs Stillness (in three movements) to John Cage's composition 4'3'' with Trevor Carlson, New York City, 28 April 2007 (six performances; six films), 2008, and the European premiere of her new film, Craneway Event, 2009. Curated by Ulrich Krempel and Isabelle Schwarz.
Curated by Ulrich Krempel and Isabelle Schwarz
This year’s Kurt Schwitters Prize for Visual Art has been awarded by the Lower Saxony Savings Bank
Foundation to Tacita Dean. Born in Canterbury, 1965, this British artist now lives and works in
Berlin. The award pays tribute to an artist who is internationally-renowned and whose art is
“carried by a sense of history, time and place, the quality of light and the essence of film itself” (to
quote the jury).
To mark the occasion, the Sprengel Museum Hannover proudly presents the German premiere of
the artist’s six film installation Merce Cunningham performs STILLNESS (in three movements) to
John Cage's composition 4'33" with Trevor Carlson, New York City, 28 April 2007 (six
performances; six films), 2008, and the European premiere of her new film, Craneway Event, 2009.
For Merce Cunningham performs STILLNESS, Tacita Dean asked the legendary choreographer and
dancer Merce Cunningham (1919 – 2009) if he would perform himself to John Cage’s silent
composition 4’ 33”. He gave this new performance and choreography the name, STILLNESS.
Each
of the six performances is filmed in a different way and shows the American dancer seated in his
Manhattan dance studio, holding his position for the three movements of Cage’s composition. The
minimal scene is only interrupted when Trevor Carlson, director of the Merce Cunningham Dance
Company, signals the end of each movement with his hand. Cunningham’s image is always
projected life-size and the six screens sit on the floor emanating, as closely as possible, his actual
presence in the installation. In 4’33”, John Cage interpreted fortuitous sounds as music and
explored the phenomenon of silence. It was first performed in 1952. Tacita Dean’s six-part
installation was first shown at Dia:Beacon in upstate New York in 2008.
Craneway Event has sadly become the last film ever to be made with and about Merce
Cunningham. Filmed in November 2008 in a former Ford factory in Richmond, California, Dean
shows Cunningham rehearsing with his dancers in preparation for an event. The plant was
designed in 1930 by Albert Kahn with continuous glass to maximise daylight working hours,
Tankers pass, pelicans swoop low and the continually shifting light become a stunning backdrop
for the human activity inside.
The Lower Saxony Savings Bank Foundation has been awarding the Kurt Schwitters Prize since
1996. It is awarded to artists of international standing whose work is not only of outstanding
significance but also exercises a lasting influence on the art of the present day, and especially to
those artists whose works in some way relate to the artist Kurt Schwitters, who was a native of
Hanover (1887-1948), or who work in entirely new fields of art or have made an essential
contribution to the interaction and integration of different artistic disciplines.
The decision to award the 2009 Kurt Schwitters Prize to Tacita Dean was based on the
recommendation of an international jury comprising Prof. Dr. Ulrich Krempel (Chairman), Director
of the Sprengel Museum Hannover, Prof. Dr. Beatrice von Bismarck, Vice-Chancellor of the
Academy of Visual Arts, Leipzig, Hendrick Driessen, Director of the De Pont museum voor
hedendaagse kunst (Tilburg, Netherlands), Dr. Fabrice Hergott, Director of the Musée d'Art
moderne de la Ville de Paris, Adrian Searle, Art Critic of The Guardian, London, and Prof. Thomas
Wagner, Art Critic (Frankfurt am Main).
Previous award winners include: Raymond Hains (1996), Thomas Schütte (1998), Gary Hill (2000),
James Coleman (2002), Joep van Lieshout (Atelier Van Lieshout) (2004) and Rodney Graham
(2006).
Tacita Dean today lives and works in Berlin. Her impressively varied oeuvre comprises films,
drawings, photographs, audio recordings and installations. The works of Tacita Dean have been
shown in international solo and group exhibitions since 1992. The artist’s most recent solo
exhibitions have taken place at Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Milan; ACCA, Melbourne (2009), the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (Hugo Boss Prize Exhibition); Hugh Lane Gallery,
Dublin (2007) and Schaulager, Basel (2006)
Press contact Goetz-Lothar Darsow
Tel. +49 (0)511 168 4 39 24
e-mail: presse.smh@hannover-stadt.de
Press preview and press conference 20th November 2009, 11 a.m.
Opening and award ceremony 22nd November 2009, 11.15 a.m.
Sprengel Museum
Kurt Schwitters Platz, Hannover
Opening times Tues 10 a.m. – 8 p.m., Wed to Sun 10 a.m. – 6 p.m
closed Mondays