Elevation 1049 - Map 1
Elevation 1049 - Map 2
Elevation 1049 - Map 3
Elevation 1049 - Map 4
Elevation 1049 - Map 5
Elevation 1049 - Map 6
Elevation 1049 - Map 7
Elevation 1049 - Map 8
Elevation 1049 - Map 9
Elevation 1049 - Map 10
Elevation 1049 - Map 11
Elevation 1049 - Map 12
Elevation 1049 - Map 13
Elevation 1049 - Map 14
Elevation 1049 - Map 15
Elevation 1049 - Map 16
Elevation 1049 - Map 17
Elevation 1049 - Map 18
Elevation 1049 - Map 19
Elevation 1049 - Map 20
Elevation 1049 - Map 21
Elevation 1049 - Map 22
Elevation 1049 - Map 23
Elevation 1049 - Map 24
Elevation 1049 - Map 25
Elevation 1049 - Map 26
Elevation 1049 - Map 27
Elevation 1049 - Map 28
Elevation 1049 - Map 29
Elevation 1049 - Map 30
Elevation 1049 - Map 31
Elevation 1049 - Map 32
Elevation 1049 - Map 33
Elevation 1049 - Map 34
Elevation 1049 - Map 35
Elevation 1049 - Map 36
Elevation 1049 - Map 37
Elevation 1049 - Map 38
Elevation 1049 - Map 39
Elevation 1049 - Map 40
Elevation 1049 - Map 41
Elevation 1049 - Map 42
Elevation 1049 - Map 43
Elevation 1049 - Map 44
Elevation 1049 - Map 45
Elevation 1049 - Map 46
Elevation 1049 - Map 47
Elevation 1049 - Map 48
Elevation 1049 - Map 49
Elevation 1049 - Map 50
Elevation 1049 - Map 51
Elevation 1049 - Map 52
X
1201.8 [m]

Michaël Borremans

Rosa, 2017

Michaël Borremans’ first monumental sculpture takes the form of a human figure impaled in the gentle but pristine landscape overlooking the Videmanette peak. The figure, derived from a series of paintings titled ‘Black Mould’, is at once sinister and comic. Driven as if by some unseen psychological charge, the silent form in quasi-ecclesiastical garb appears descended from the heavens, a strange and beguiling outcast of the inner landscape where faith, morality and politics mesh and collide.

Location
Wanderweg Schönried - Gruben
7.28663

Rosa & TC Boring in Concert – 4 February 2017video produced by the Vinyl Factory, 2017

Rosa, 2017

© Photos by Stefan Altenburger, 2017
© Photos by Stefan Altenburger, 2017
© Photos by Stefan Altenburger, 2017
© Photos by Stefan Altenburger, 2017

Impression from the fabrication process

© Kunstgiesserei St. Gallen

Impressions from the site visit at Kunstgiesserei St. Gallen 9 January 2017

Kunstgiesserei St. Gallen, January 2017 © Photos: Marc Bättig
Kunstgiesserei St. Gallen, January 2017 © Photos: Marc Bättig
Kunstgiesserei St. Gallen, January 2017 © Photo: Marc Bättig
Kunstgiesserei St. Gallen, January 2017 © Photo: Marc Bättig

Michael BorremansCV

Michaël Borremans's drawings, paintings, and films present an evocative combination of solemn-looking characters, unusual close-ups, and unsettling still lifes. There is a theatrical dimension to his works, which are highly staged and ambiguous, just as his complex and open-ended scenes lend themselves to conflicting moods—at once nostalgic, darkly comical, disturbing, and grotesque. His paintings display a concentrated dialogue with previous art historical epochs, yet their unconventional compositions and curious narratives defy expectations and lend them an indefinable yet universal character.
Borremans was born in 1963 in Geraardsbergen, Belgium. In 1996, he received his M.F.A. from Hogeschool voor Wetenschap en Kunst, Campus St. Lucas, in Ghent. Since 2001, the artist's work has been represented by David Zwirner. Previous solo exhibitions at the gallery in New York include The Devil's Dress (2011), Taking Turns (2009), Horse Hunting (2006), and Trickland (2003), which marked his United States debut. Black Mould marked his first solo presentation at David Zwirner, London, on view June 13 through August 14, 2015.
Over the past decade, Borremans's work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at a number of prominent institutions. In 2014, a major museum survey, Michaël Borremans: As sweet as it gets, consisting of one hundred works from the past two decades, was presented at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels. The exhibition traveled later in the year to the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, followed by the Dallas Museum of Art in 2015. Also on view in 2014 was the artist's first museum solo show in Japan, Michaël Borremans: The Advantage, at the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. In 2011, a comprehensive solo show, titled Eating the Beard, was presented at the Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart, which toured to the Műcsarnok Kunsthalle, Budapest and the Kunsthalle Helsinki. In 2010, he had a solo exhibition at the Kunstnernes Hus in Oslo as well as commissioned work on view at the Royal Palace in Brussels. Other venues which have hosted solo exhibitions include kestnergesellschaft, Hanover (2009); de Appel Arts Centre, Amsterdam (2007); Kunsthalle Bremerhaven, Germany; and the Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel (both 2004). In 2005, he had a one-person exhibition of paintings and drawings at the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent. The paintings then traveled to Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art, London and The Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, while the drawings traveled to the Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio.
Work by the artist is held in public collections internationally, including The Art Institute of Chicago; Dallas Museum of Art; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia; The Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent; and the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Borremans lives and works in Ghent.

Use the scrollbar or your mousewheel to scroll down the map.