The exhibition Life Forms at Bonniers Konsthall in
Stockholm invites us (until 10 January) to join
in a discussion about how the nature of our day is seen in
contemporary art. The exhibition brings together a group
of noted, internationally active artists who depict nature,
the universe and the broader ecological contexts.
In a time of environmental pollution and climate change,
Life Forms is intended to reveal the way that the
relationship between nature and culture, human and
landscape, is depicted today. How does contemporary art
imagine our life on earth? Is it an unmitigated apocalyptic
landscape, trashed and exploited, that contemporary art
travels through? Or is there, in art, room for new utopias,
in which art can contribute to the discovery of new life
forms? A desire to find a way back to an imagined, more
original state, or does it present images of completely new
worlds and life forms in which the centre stage is not
occupied by human beings?
Life Forms has links with the land art and installation art of
the 60s and 70s. The exhibition includes painting, drawing,
installation, photography, video and large-scale sculpture.
On display are Charles Avery’s project The Islanders, in
which the artist has created his own world of unique flora
and fauna, and Katie Paterson’s map of the 27,000 dead
stars that people have discovered in the universe. Henrik
Håkansson’s hundreds of orchids will cover the Konsthall
from floor to ceiling. There is also a contribution from Jani
Ruscica, whose video installation samples sounds made by
bats with beatboxers from New York.
In another important aspect of the exhibition the Konsthall
is showing a series of seminars and films. The exhibition
will also be accompanied by the production, in
collaboration with publishers Albert Bonniers Förlag, of an
extensive anthology, the contributors being Swedish and
international authors, theorists and the participating
artists. This continues the collaboration that began with the
volume Anachronisms to accompany the Against Time
exhibition in 2007.
Sara Arrhenius is the exhibition curator. The exhibition
architecture is made by Klas Ruin and Ola Broms Wessel at
the architect office Spridd.
Participating artists:
Micol Assaël, Charles Avery, Rosa Barba, Andreas
Eriksson, Ane Graff, Tue Greenfort, Henrik Håkansson,
Helen Mirra, Katie Paterson, Jani Ruscica, Tomas
Saraceno.
Participating artists in the film programme:
Bruce Conner, Nancy Holt, Gordon Matta-Clark, Ana
Mendieta, Robert Smithson.
Pictures from
above:
Henrik Håkansson, Broken Forest, 2006.
Photo
Bonniers Konsthall.
Charles Avery, Untitled (Lionel
Leslie's Leviathan), 2009. Courtesy of Pilar Corrias
Gallery.
Rosa Barba, They Shine, 2007. Courtesy of
Carlier Gebauer.
Tue Greenfort, Closed Biosphere,
2003. Courtesy of Johann König.
Tue Greenfort,
Microcosmos, Closed Biosphere, 2006 – 2009. Photo
Bonniers Konsthall.
Tomas Saraceno, Iridiscent
Planet, 2009. Photo Bonniers Konsthall.
Life Forms: nature in contemporary art

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- Elena Sommariva
- 28 November 2009
