Roni Horn

23 March - 25 May 2013

Zürich

'I don't think of the object, the material thing or what is produced as the endpoint of a work. The aspiration is always the experience, which means the audience, the individual, is integral to the value of the work.' – Roni Horn American artist Roni Horn will present a new glass sculpture at Hauser & Wirth Zürich, opening on 23 March. Shown alongside her photographic series 'Untitled (Weather)', this exhibition will showcase the artist's sculptural and photographic explorations into the effect of multiplicity on perception and memory. Entitled 'Untitled ("Consider incompleteness as a verb.")', which references a passage from Canadian poet Anne Carson's book 'Plainwater', Horn's new sculpture is composed of two large glass cubes, which are matte on the sides with a smooth, glossed surface, resembling freshly cut blocks of ice. The cubes are made from a two-colour glass which reflect their surroundings. Each piece is a subtly different shade of blue and, depending on the type of light in the gallery, the time of day, and the weather outside, these shades shift from violet to lavender to aquamarine. Horn's photographic work, 'Untitled (Weather)', will be displayed across from the new glass sculpture. 'Untitled (Weather)' is a series related to Horn's 'You are the Weather, Part 2' (2010 – 2011), the second part of a key work in Horn's oeuvre, 'You are the Weather' (1994 – 1996). 'Untitled (Weather)' consists of groups of photographs of a woman, bathing in the hot springs and pools in Iceland. Like the varying hues of the glass work, in each photograph, the woman’s facial expressions shift and change subtly, reflecting the weather conditions around her.

Installation views

About the Artist

Roni Horn

Roni Horn’s work consistently generates uncertainty to thwart closure in her work. Important across her oeuvre is her longstanding interest to the protean nature of identity, meaning, and perception, as well as the notion of doubling; issues which continue to propel Horn’s practice.

Current Exhibitions