April 22, 2021
Installation view of the life installation by Olafur Eliasson in the Fondation Beyeler
With the kind permission of the artist; new belt cutter; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. © 2021 Olafur Eliasson, Photo: Mark Niedermann
When a museum is flooded with water, a
major failure has usually occurred. In the Fondation Beyeler at the gates of
the Swiss city of Basel, the flooding of the museum is part of the exhibition:
a new site-specific installation called Life by the Danish-Icelandic artist
Olafur Eliasson. For this solo show (now through July 11, 2021), the artist
immerses the museum in a border-crossing investigation of our preconceptions of
nature and culture. He has allowed an adjacent pond—a feature usually separated
from the interior by a large glass wall—into the Renzo Piano-designed museum
(with the architect's permission). Visitors can navigate the up to 80 cm deep
water using a series of walkways that lead in and out of the building. At night
the interior is illuminated with blue light.
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Life aims to make people recognize how their lives are inextricably entangled with their surroundings and with structures and systems that go beyond their local context. this ultimately results in letting go of control and understanding that uncertainty is part of it all. Eliasson also dyed the water fluorescent green and filled it with pond plants, including water lilies and shell flowers selected by landscape architect Günther Vogt. The water has been colored with uranine, an organic dye commonly used to observe water currents and which Eliasson previously used for his work on the Green River (1998), which stained rivers in cities such as Stockholm, Tokyo and Los Angeles.
Olafur Eliasson, Life. Installation view: Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, 2021.
Courtesy of the artist; neugerriemschneider, Berlin; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York / Los Angeles © 2021 Olafur Eliasson Photo: Mark Niedermann
“In recent years, I have increasingly grown
interested in efforts to consider life not from a human-centric perspective but
from a broad, biocentric perspective,’ commented olafur eliasson on the
motivation behind the show. “I’ve found myself turning nouns into verbs – when
I go through my exhibition, I try to tree, for instance – in order to become
aware of perspectives that go beyond what we humans can properly imagine.”
The show is open 24 hours a day. Visitors
can access the installation at any time. After 9:30 pm they the visitors no
longer need a ticket. So far ‘insects, spiders, ducks, a goose and cats’ in
relation to non-human visitors have visited. There is also a livestream of the
exhibition with cameras fitted with various optical filters that “point to
non-human perspectives”.
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