VTV Classics (r3): Christoph Büchel: Simply Botiful (2006)

In this video, we revisit Christoph Büchel’s 2006 exhibition Simply Botiful, a huge and complex installation at gallery Hauser & Wirth’s former Coppermill space in East London. Büchel created an immersive experience by installing a labyrinth of rooms and spaces that simulate hotel rooms, shops, bedrooms, kitchens, warehouses, and repair shops that the visitor encounters by walking through corridors, crawling through holes and climbing stairs up and down. Currently, Büchel represents Iceland with his controversial work The Mosque at the Venice Art Biennale 2015 in Venice, Italy.

This is another segment in our series r3 that highlights the treasures of VernissageTV’s huge archive. R3 is a series of VernissageTV classics, now re-mastered, re-edited and reissued in High Definition. Click here for the complete list of videos. Click here for the original post.

Christoph Büchel: Simply Botiful at Hauser & Wirth Coppermill. London (UK), October 13, 2006.

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Complete video (47:23 min.):

Exhibition text:

A major exhibition by Swiss artist Christoph Büchel will be the second exhibition at Hauser & Wirth Coppermill in London’s East End. Büchel works in a variety of media, including film, printed materials, sculpture and textiles, though he is perhaps best known for his conceptual projects and large-scale installation pieces. Büchel often appropriates mass media sources such as the Internet, printed political pamphlets and everyday household objects. His work is informed by an explicit political awareness, often telling of new forms of propaganda in an era of mediated war.

Büchel’s complex installations force his audience to participate in scenarios that are physically demanding and psychologically unsettling. Cramped tunnels, claustrophobic chambers and frequent dead-ends induce feelings of panic and paranoia. He explores the unstable relationship between security and internment, placing visitors in the brutally contradictory roles of victim and voyeur. Gallery visitors to Büchel’s 2005 installation ‘Hole’ at the Kunsthalle Basel were forced through small rooms connected by constricted passageways and steep ladders. Inside these fraught spaces, the chilling sight of a suicide caught on surveillance camera was juxtaposed with a psychotherapist’s consulting room and the remnants of a bombed out Swiss bus. The frozen rooms that form the basis of such works as ‘The House of Friction (Pumpwork Heimat)’ (2002) offer spaces of oppressive cold, where preservation borders on the brink of obsolescence. Experiencing such charged spaces is usually a solitary task, though this private experience becomes the means by which collective tensions and traumas might be unearthed.

For the 2005 Venice Biennale, Büchel collaborated with Gianni Motti on the ‘Guantanamo Initiative’: the artists campaigned to lease the site of Guantanamo Bay from the Cuban government, on the grounds that the US occupation of the territory is unlawful. A collection of paperwork documents their efforts. Other conceptual acts have more forcefully demonstrated the element of institutional critique that is present throughout his oeuvre. ‘Invite Yourself’ (2002) consisted of Büchel auctioning his place at Manifesta on the Internet auction-site e-bay. ‘Capital Affair’ (also 2002), another collaboration with Motti, promised the entire exhibition budget to the gallery visitor who could find a cheque hidden within the exhibition space of the Helmhaus in Zurich. Büchel repeatedly manipulates and exploits the perceived power of the social and legal contract, subverting the relationship between artist and audience while insisting on a more active political role for both.

Christoph Büchel (born Basel 1966) studied at the University of Art and Design, Basel, from 1986-89, at Cooper Union School of Art, New York in 1989-90, and at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf from 1992-1997. In 2000-2001, he was awarded a scholarship at PS1, New York. Recent solo exhibitions have included: ‘Shelter’ at Haus der Kunst, Munich (2002); ‘Private Territories’ at the Swiss Institute, New York (2004); ‘Close Quarters’ at Kunstverein Freiburg (2004); and ‘Hole’ at Kunsthalle Basel (2005). In 2005, he collaborated with Gianni Motti at the Venice Biennale. Christoph Büchel lives and works in Basel.

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