Night and Fog
January 30–April 3, 2016
Karl-Tizian-Platz
6900 Bregenz
Austria
Hours: Tuesday–Sunday 10am–6pm,
Thursday 10am–8pm
T +43 5574 485940
kub@kunsthaus-bregenz.at
Scottish born Susan Philipsz is one of today’s leading artists. Her work revolves around a melancholic existentialism and explorations of the human voice. She became well-known through a capella renditions of songs. For the Glasgow International Festival she developed Lowlands, after a ballad from the 16th century, which was later recreated at Tate Britain in London, where it won her the prestigious Turner Prize (2010).
The subject matter of memory, trauma, and mourning are ones she has increasingly confronted recently, such as at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, and in Kassel for dOCUMENTA (13). For her new series of works War Damaged Musical Instruments, 2015, she has been employing instruments damaged by war. The point of departure for her current project for Kunsthaus Bregenz is Peter Zumthor’s architecture, an illuminated structure, together with the lake and the fog that is typical of the town. Fog as a metaphor was also the source of the title for the 1955 French documentary Night and Fog by Alain Resnais reconstructing the deportations to Auschwitz and Majdanek. Philipsz has deconstructed Hanns Eisler’s soundtrack for the film into the individual voices of the instruments. Isolated and removed from the overall composition, their timbres fill the seemingly archaic spaces of the Kunsthaus with an almost sculptural presence.
Philipsz has created a second sound installation at the Jewish Cemetery in Hohenems, in collaboration with the Jewish Museum there, which can be experienced concurrently to the exhibition at KUB.
At Kunsthaus Bregenz Philipsz explores disappearance, obscurity and absence, merging the atmospherics of the site with a deeper historical perspective. “I have chosen to work with mainly wind and brass instruments to emphasise the air passing through the instruments and passing through the space. Each of the tones is separated and there are gaps and pauses where the other instruments should be. At each level the work is different but the composition is reprised and there is a sense of repetition with sounds from different levels combining in unexpected places throughout the building.” (Susan Philipsz)
Susan Philipsz — Night and Fog is an exhibition at two venues in collaboration with the Jewish Museum Hohenems.
KUB publication: Susan Philipsz Night and Fog
Published by Kunsthaus Bregenz, Thomas D. Trummer; with contributions by Theodor Ringborg, Linda Schädler, and Thomas D. Trummer. Graphic design: Stefan Altenried, Bernd Gassner, Lindau. German | English, approx. 208 pages, 21 x 28.5 cm, hardcover, Date of publication: April 2016.