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
1143.4 [m]

Thomas Schütte

Kristall II (Modell 1:1), 2014

Neben seinen bekannteren Skulpturen hat Thomas Schütte seit den achtziger Jahren auch architektonische Modelle in einem 1:1 Massstab geschaffen. Schüttes Objekte, die irgendwo zwischen Skulptur, eindringlicher Installation und Architektur anzusiedeln sind, hinterfragen oft elementare Formen von Behausungen und ihre Beziehung zum Menschen. Kristall II (Modell 1:1) ist eine umgestaltete Version einer Skulptur von 2014 aus Kupfer und Holz. Die Skulptur erinnert an die kristalline Form von Schnee und Eis. Man wird von ihr umrahmt, wenn man sie betritt. Gleichzeitig ist sie so gestellt, dass sie einen Rahmen für die umliegende Landschaft bildet.

Lage
Skipiste Wispile, Neue Matteweg, Gstaad
Täglich 12h-19h
7.29055 / 46.46241

Kristall II (Modell 1:1), 2014Installation view. Elevation1049: Avalanche

Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos by Stefan Altenburger
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos by Stefan Altenburger
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos by Stefan Altenburger
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos by Stefan Altenburger
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos by Stefan Altenburger

Kristall II (Modell 1:1), 2014

Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos: André Morin
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos: André Morin
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos: André Morin
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos: André Morin
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos: André Morin
Copper, wood, 500 x 470 x 775 cm © 2017, ProLitteris, Zürich, Photos: André Morin

Thomas SchütteCV

Thomas Schütte was born in Oldenburg, Germany in 1954. He studied at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf until 1981. Schütte’s oeuvre spans a diverse range of mediums and themes. His earlier works are mostly architectural models that comment on the role of the artist in society and on the art institution itself. Over the years, his preoccupations about the human condition in general as well as the cultural, social and political elements of everyday life have merged within his work. This myriad of themes comes to life through sculptures, prints, drawings, watercolors and photographs that employ figuration as a pivotal means of expression, particularly in his works of the late 1980s and 1990s. Schütte is well known for a series of three monumental-scale anthropomorphic figures cast in aluminum entitled Large Ghosts, 1996 through which he explores the expressive potential of the human form. He is also well known for United Enemies, 1993, a series of sculptures and photographs that comment on the contradictory nature of the human condition.
Thomas Schütte has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and Europe. Recent solo exhibitions of his work have been held in institutions such as the Museo de Arte Renia Sofia in 2010, the Haus der kunst in Munich in 2009 and the Kunstmuseum Winterthur in Switzerland in 2003. He has also participated in exhibitions in major institutions such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam and the Fondation Beyeler in Basel. Schütte participated in the 2005 Venice Biennale, where he was awarded the Golden Lion. His work has been featured in multiple publications. Thomas Schütte lives and works in Germany.

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