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Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen stages Carsten Höller’s exhibition Divided+Divided
Written by Gustoff Kramer Wednesday, 17 August 2011 22:04
ROTTERDAM, NL - Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen stages Carsten Höller’s exhibition Divided Divided. The popular contemporary artist is creating a 1,500 m2 installation especially for the museum. What’s more, visitors can spend the night in the Revolving Hotel Room. All the works on show are based on a simple mathematical formula that divides and re-divides the space and the objects into two. Installations on view through 25 April, 2010.
Carsten Höller is presenting a new
series of huge complex mushroom replicas (Triple Giant Mushrooms, 2009-2010). He
has made a floating room from aluminium (Swinging Spiral 2010), and hanging from
the ceiling is an enormous mobile composed of seven birdcages (Singing Canaries
Mobile, 2009), complete with live singing canaries. There are also two video
installations from the Flicker Films series (2005), in which flickering images
of performances by African dance groups are projected. A new wall installation
of painted ‘Nymphenburg’ porcelain plates (Flying City Tableware, 2010) is being
shown alongside these works. Visitors can set these plates in motion by cranking
a handle. The exhibition also features a recent series of paintings of birds and
some abstract murals.
Revolving Hotel Room
Carsten Höller has fitted out a hotel room in the adjoining gallery in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. The Revolving Hotel Room is a complete hotel room, including a bedside table and mini-bar, mounted on four revolving discs. While the exhibition is running visitors will be able to book into this exclusive room with its constantly changing view. Guests in the Revolving Hotel Room have twenty-four-hour access to the entire museum. This hotel room was shown previously in the Guggenheim Museum in New York with great success.
‘Divided’ Approach
All the works and the floor plan of the exhibition are constructed to a formula that divides what has already been divided. It varies from a simple division into two to a complex spiral formula which is the basis of the Swinging Spiral. Carsten Höller is fascinated by the concept of ‘divided’. In his exhibition One Day One Day in Färgfabriken in Stockholm (2003), for example, two different works were shown on random days without the public knowing. In association with the Fondazione Prada in London he opened the now famous Double Club (2008-09)—a bar, restaurant and discotheque. Sections from the ‘Congolese’ and ‘Western’ interiors, music and dining were divided in the same way in this club.
Oeuvre
Höller’s work has been exhibited internationally for the last twenty years, including solo shows in the Fondazione Prada, Milan (2000), the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (200¬6) and the Kunsthaus in Bregenz, Austria (2008). In 2002 Carsten Höller exhibited Light Corner in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. In 2006 he produced Test Site (a set of slides) for The Unilever Series in Tate Modern in London and he represented Sweden at the 51st Venice Biennale in 2005. Carsten Höller lives and works in Stockholm.
Visit Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen at : http://www.boijmans.nl/en/
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