Stay Stamina Stay
29 November 2014 – 22 February 2015
Somerset
Hauser & Wirth is pleased to announce two exhibitions of new video works by Pipilotti Rist, unveiled in parallel presentations across its London and Somerset galleries.
A pioneer of video art, since the mid-eighties, Rist's film installations take many guises. She has likened them in the past to handbags, 'because there is room in them for everything: painting, technology, language, music, flowing pictures, poetry, commotion, premonitions of death, sex and friendliness.' From this versatile, capricious medium, Rist draws inner and outer worlds of kaleidoscopic colourful wonderment.
Hauser & Wirth Somerset will present two new rooms by Pipilotti Rist and an installation of 'hiplights' in the farmyard. From summer 2012 through to summer 2013, Rist spent a sabbatical in Bruton, taking part in the first Hauser & Wirth Somerset artist residency. The experience had a profound impact upon her practice, producing new work in response to the surrounding landscape and the people she met.
Rist's title 'Stay Stamina Stay' plays on its double-meaning; referencing the stamen, (the pollen-producing reproductive organ of a flower) and also a 'resistance to hardship'. Rist is concerned with our connection and interaction with the world around us; how we relate to our landscape, what preconceptions we carry from our respective cultures, and what those cultures have in common. Through her sensuously observed close-ups of the natural environment and the human body, Rist is interested in the 'often unbelievable strength that humans are generating every day.
In the Rhoades Gallery, 'Mercy Garden' (2014) is projected onto two of the walls; the luscious imagery in the installation comes mostly from footage the artist shot whilst living in Somerset. Slow motion close-ups play out in mirrored effect; fingers stroke stinging nettles, hands caress soft vivid petals, lips purse underwater and washing floats in the breeze, against a bright blue sky. The images are filtered and layered, set to a soundtrack of banjo folk music by Heinz Rohrer, inviting visual and tactile wonder and engaging all of the senses.
This sumptuous all-encompassing environment is designed for relaxation and meditation; the floor is partially carpeted in lush green with Somerset sheepskin rugs scattered across. Rist encourages her viewers to recline, inviting them to contemplate, and at the same time, to share a collective experience with their fellow spectators.
Rist is commonly known for creating works that are at once feminist and feminine, often exploring the female body; but in 'Mercy Garden', all of the characters are men (or boys) and the film celebrates a masculine strength, combined with fragility and tenderness. The main character, a young local farmer, is shown interacting with his natural environment. Visceral images of his hands running through soil and tending plants pose questions about life and death, and humans' relationship to the natural world. Rist describes the work as 'a poem about agriculture, the farmer, his body, his fingers and his machines as an extension of the body'.
On entering the Bourgeois Gallery, the viewer is immersed in another of Rist's parallel worlds. The installation 'Sleeping Pollen' (2014) is projected through seven mirrored spheres, suspended from the ceiling, which create moving projections all around the space. Visitors are invited to move in and around the projections, and also to become part of them, reflecting the artist's continuing desire to create a close relationship between work and viewer. The doors and windows have been covered in translucent acetate in cherry red and moss green, creating a hazy glow that changes in intensity throughout the day. Rist describes 'Sleeping Pollen' as 'offering the winter plants an electronic bed in a dark cosy room. Their dreams spin slowly in the air'.
Outside, the installation 'Hiplights' (2011), which was first conceived for Rist's solo exhibition 'Eyeball Massage' at the Hayward Gallery, London in 2011, is a remarkable, outdoor light work, created from hundreds of pairs of underpants with LED lamps. The underwear is strung between each of the buildings around the farmyard, like an enormous celebratory washing line.
About the Artist
Pipilotti Rist was born in Grabs in the Swiss Rhine Valley in 1962. Since emerging on the international art scene in the mid-1980s and 1990s with famous single channel videos such as 'I'm Not The Girl Who Misses Much' (1986) and 'Pickelporno' (1992), Rist has had numerous solo and group exhibitions and is one of the most celebrated video artists working today. In 2009 Rist was awarded the Joan Miró Prize for her wide-ranging creative activity and her outstanding contribution to the current artistic scene by Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona, Spain. For her first feature film, 'Pepperminta' (2009), in 2009 Rist was awarded the President of the Jury's Extraordinary Award at Spain's 6th Seville European Film Festival and in 2010 she received the 'Cutting the Edge Award' by Miami International European Film Festival. In 2012, Rist was awarded the Harper's Bazaar Art China prize for 'Best Artist' and in June 2013, she was awarded the Zurich Festival Prize 2013.
Recent solo exhibitions include 'Gentle Wave in Your Eye Fluid', Times Museum in Guangzhou, China (2013); 'Pipilotti Rist. A la belle étoile', Henry Art Gallery, University of Washington, Seattle WA (2012); 'Pipilotti Rist – Spear to heaven!', LEEUM Samsung Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea; 'Blutbetriebene Kameras und quellende Räume', Kunstmuseum St. Gallen, Switzerland (2012); 'Eyeball Massage', Hayward Gallery, London, England (2011) which travelled to Kunsthalle Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany (2012); 'Parasimpatico', Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Cinema Manzoni, Milan, Italy (2011); 'Pipilotti Rist. Partit amistós – sentiments electrónics', Fundació Joan Miró & Centre Cultura Caixa Girona Fontana d'Or, Barcelona / Girona, Spain (2010); 'Elixir – The video organism of Pipilotti Rist', Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Netherlands (2009); 'Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Metres)', MoMA, New York NY (2008) and 'A la belle étoile', Centre Pompidou, Paris, France (2007).
Pipilotti Rist, a pioneer of spatial video art, was born 1962 in Grabs in the Swiss Rhine Valley on the Austrian Border and has been a central figure within the international art scene since the mid-1980s.
Astounding the art world with the energetic exorcistic statement of her now famous single channel videos, such as ‘I’m Not The Girl Who Misses Much,’ 1986 and ‘Pickelporno,’ 1992, her artistic work has co-developed with technical advancements and in playful exploration of its new possibilities to propose footage resembling a collective brain. Through large video projections and digital manipulation, she has developed immersive installations that draw life from slow caressing showers of vivid color tones, like her works ‘Sip My Ocean,’ 1996 or ‘Worry Will Vanish,’ 2014.
For Rist, showing vulnerability is a sign of strength on which she draws for inspiration. With her curious and lavish recordings of nature (to which humans belong as an animal), and her investigative editing, Rist seeks to justify the privileged position we are born with, simply by being human. Her installations and exhibition concepts are expansive, finding within the mind, senses and body the possibility for endless discovery and poetical invention. ‘Pixel Forest,’ 2016, made from 3,000 thousand LEDs hung on strings, resembles a movie screen that has exploded into the room, allowing viewers an immersive walk through 3-dimensional video. As she herself puts it, ‘beside the energy-intensive exploration of the geographical world, pictures, films and sounds have been and are the spaces into which we can escape... The projector is the flamethrower, the space is the vortex and you are the pearl within.’
Since 1984, Rist has had countless solo and group exhibitions, and video screenings worldwide. Her recent solo exhibitions are 'Electric Idyll' at the Fire Station Doha (2024), 'Prickling Goosebumps & A Humming Horizon' at Hauser & Wirth New York and Luhring Augustine Chelsea (2023-24), 'Behind Your Eyelid' at Tai Kwun Hong Kong (2022), ‘Big Heartedness, Be My Neighbor’ at The Geffen Contemporary, MOCA, Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles (2021 – 2022), ‘Your Eye Is My Island’ at MoMAK, The National Museum of Modern Art Kyoto and ART TOWER MITO (2021). ‘Åbn min Lysning. Open my Glade’ at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art Humlebæk Denmark (2019), ‘Sip My Ocean’ at the Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney (2017 – 2018), ‘Pixel Forest’ at New Museum New York (2016 – 2017) and ‘Your Saliva is My Diving Suit of the Ocean of Pain’ at Kunsthaus Zürich (2016), all resulted in record-breaking attendance numbers for each institution. A major exhibition is planned for summer 2025 at UCCA Beijing.
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