Wolfgang Laib in Lugano

This exhibition dedicated to Wolfgang Laib at the MASI Lugano comprises 50 works of the German artist, such as the field of pine pollen, which invite us to contemplate the cycles of nature.

Wolfgang Laib, Rice House, 2000-2001 e 2011
The drawings and the photographs that open the show immediately outline Laib’s unique artistic language, capable of merging, with harmony and simplicity, a deep knowledge of culture and Eastern religions, and an equally close reflection on the roots of Western cultural heritage. The photographs Laib has taken during his trips to Europe and Asia comprise a repertoire of forms that draw new life in his essential pastel drawings. In turn, the motifs that fill his works on paper are echoed and magnified in the sculptures and installations on display, according to a principle of circularity and repetition that is characteristic of this artist’s work.
Wolfgang Laib, MASI Lugano, 2017
Wolfgang Laib, MASI Lugano, 2017
In the ample exhibition space on level -2, works representing Laib’s entire artistic trajectory converse without barriers in the exhibition space: from his essential Milkstone, which perfectly and in a balanced manner combines the hardness of marble and the fluidity of milk, present since the artist’s early shows, to his more recent wooden structures covered with reflecting Burmese lacquer (Untitled, 2003); from the famous sequence of the Rice Meals (1983) to the imposing ziggurat (Es gibt keinen Anfang und kein Ende, 1999) made of wood and beeswax that impresses the viewer for its sheer size and intense fragrance. At the heart of the exhibition is the large and luminous field of pine pollen, a presence as ephemeral as it is grandiose, which inevitably invites us to contemplate the cycles of nature and life.
Wolfgang Laib, Rice House, 2000-2001 e 2011
Wolfgang Laib, Rice House, 2000-2001 e 2011
Laib’s attitude in dealing with the organic and inorganic materials that make his works unmistakable is significant: he sculpts marble, shapes beeswax, and arranges pollen in orderly compositions without presuming to attach new value to the materials. Rather, he seeks to act as a go-between who, through his work, makes visible the intrinsic beauty of every material.

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