October 8, 2023–October 27, 2024
Via Nova 60
Postfach 220
CH-7017 Flims
Switzerland
Studio Other Spaces (SOS)—led by artist Olafur Eliasson and architect Sebastian Behmann—presents their third exhibition entitled Räumliche Solidaritäten (Spatial solidarities) at Das Gelbe Haus Flims in Switzerland. The exhibition takes a multi-narrative approach, sharing a selection of SOS’s projects alongside local initiatives from Flims and the surrounding area to creatively address agricultural, social and infrastructural issues.
Räumliche Solidaritäten (Spatial Solidarities) aims to create a space for dialogue. Through this format, Studio Other Spaces shed light on common misconceptions and dualities: mountain and valley, city and countryside, nature and culture are not contradictions, or rivals, but intricately interwoven and dependent on one another—together forming the fabric of the area. For the exhibition, Das Gelbe Haus Flims is turned into a space of echoes that reach beyond the walls of the landmark by acclaimed Swiss architect Valerio Olgiati. Based on themes that inform Studio Other Spaces’s design language and research—such as energy, infrastructure, agriculture, nutrition, and education—local projects have been gathered with the help of co-curators Damian Christinger and Elizabeth McTernan.
The exhibition reflects SOS’s interwoven interests as an office for architecture and art: sharing novel design tools, traditional and cutting-edge building techniques, sustainable food systems, renewable energy, urban-rural cooperation, local knowledge, site-specificity, and consideration to “more-than-human” perspective. Through collaboration with regional partners, SOS strive to develop a meaningful relationship to the environments that they typically arrive at as “outsiders”. By highlighting regional entanglements and weaving connections between projects, SOS share a lively exchange with cities, research institutions, and independent makers. The exhibition also displays points of contention in the region, to demonstrate that friction is part of any process of change in a community. Additionally, it includes places and entities that are not necessarily framed by any human project, but which nonetheless act as prominent characters in the landscape: for instance, the enormous wall of the Zervreila dam, which has reshaped the ecosystems and acoustics of the area below; Icelandic moss and its idiosyncratic role in Rhaeto-Romanic folklore; and the ancient Flims landslide, upon which the region has been built.
Sebastian Behmann, SOS co-founder: “Räumliche Solidaritäten (Spatial Solidarities) invites visitors into the spaces of dialogue that are foundational to our work at Studio Other Spaces. The exhibition is not about showing architectural work but about doing it. Das Gelbe Haus reverberates with voices, agencies, collaborations, and experiments from Flims and the surroundings. To access this expansive network, we spent time with the people who live, work, and experiment in the valleys and mountains of the region. The exhibition draws attention to local projects, their interdependences, and their place-making qualities.”
Olafur Eliasson, SOS co-founder: “If you listen carefully, you will hear places and more-than-human beings talk. The mountain speaks, the river, the valley, the city, the sky, and, here in Flims, even the landslide speaks from 10,000 years ago. All these places and landmarks, which we often take for granted as static, are in constant, if imperceptible, motion. To those who listen, they speak of time and movement, entanglements and change. Listening is an act of solidarity – with other people, more-than-human beings, objects, and environments. In all their diversity and complexity, these acts of solidarity—these solidarities—form Räumliche Solidaritäten.”
Carmen Gasser and Remo Derungs, Artistic Directors, Das Gelbe Haus Flims: “We invited Berlin-based Studio Other Spaces to offer the inhabitants and visitors of Flims a new perspective on local topics surrounding Das Gelbe Haus. SOS’s approach to developing the exhibition offers a new and bold perspective, process and translation that will be inspiring for Flims and the area.”
Learn more about the exhibition at here or here. Press contact: press [at] studiootherspaces.net.