Synopsis
Austrian artist-provocateur Erwin Wurm has gained an international reputation for challenging traditional notions of sculpture, photography, performance art, and drawing. His classic One Minute Sculptures invite audiences to participate in the creation of temporary sculptures by combining their bodies with a variety of common objects according to the artist's instructional drawings. Erwin Wurm: I Love My Time, I Don't Like My Time is a comprehensive survey that highlights more than 10 years of intelligent, elegant, and humorous production. It includes staged scenarios for the creation of select One Minute Sculptures; the photo series Instructions for Idleness (2001), How to Be Politically Incorrect (2002-2003), Thinking About Philosophy (2004), and Hotel Rooms (2001); a selection of video images from 59 Positions (1992), Flight Simulator (1998), and Adelphi Sculptures (1999); and other projects. The centerpiece is Wurm's I Love My Time, I Don't Like My Time (2003), the latest in the artist's Fat series, which explores the wild and dark potential of digital animation.
About the Author
Born in 1954 in Bruck an der Mur, Austria, Erwin Wurm has had solo exhibitions at Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, Vienna, Kunsthaus Bregenz, and FRAC Limousin, Limoges. His work has also been featured in the Venice Biennale, the 5th Lyon Biennale of Contemporary Art and the Taipei Biennial.
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