Olafur EliassonBy Glen Helfand
Published: September 7, 2007
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Photo by Jens Ziehe, © 2007 Olafur Eliasson, courtesy the artist, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, and neugerriemschneider
Olafur Eliasson, "Room for one colour" (1997), Installation view at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden, 2005
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© 2007 Olafur Eliasson, courtesy the artist, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, and neugerriemschneider
Olafur Eliasson, "One-way colour tunnel" (2007), Digital rendering of interior view, site-specific sculpture to be made at SFMOMA on the occasion of "Take your time: Olafur Eliasson"
This fall, Eliasson’s first major U.S. survey exhibition, “Take your time,” opens at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA). The show features more than a dozen installations, photographs, and sculptures arranged in a series of interconnected rooms and corridors (including a new piece that turns the museum’s skylight bridge into the descriptively titled One-way colour tunnel), and it offers an opportunity to engage the artist’s participatory oeuvre in a more sustained manner, through its immersive presentation of linked installations. Meanwhile, “Your tempo,” a concurrent presentation of Eliasson’s recent contribution to the BMW Art Car program—a hydrogen race car encased in ice and housed in an industrial-strength freezer—points to his interests in the environment and the physical experience of perception, as well as a complicated relationship to commerce (the artist also created a major, globally visible 2006 commission for Louis Vuitton when he filled the holiday windows of 350 Vuitton branches with his work Eye See You). Eliasson spoke to ARTINFO about these concerns, as well as his indebtedness to the California Light and Space artists, during a check-in visit to supervise the labor-intensive installation of his show at SFMOMA.
Olafur, the catalog for this exhibition includes a dialogue between you and Robert Irwin. Is it significant for you that this exhibition is organized in California, where the Light and Space movement emerged?
One could argue, though, that because The Weather Project was so well attended, you’ve been identified as someone who can activate a museum space in a popular, almost spectacular way. Irwin’s work is much subtler. |