Arts and Design

Olafur Eliasson floods museum and removes wall, opening it 24-hours-a-day to ‘insects, bats or birds’




Installation view of Olafur Eliasson’s Life installation at the Fondation Beyeler
Courtesy of the artist; neugerriemschneider; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. © 2021 Olafur Eliasson, Photo: Mark Niedermann

Usually when a museum is flooded with water, something has gone seriously wrong. But at the Fondation Beyeler just outside the Swiss city of Basel, the flooding of the museum is all part of the show: a new site-specific installation called Life by the Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson.

The artist has removed one side of the Renzo Piano-designed building (with the architect’s blessing) and let the feature pond—usually separated from the climate-controlled interior by a large glass wall—into the museum. Visitors can navigate the waters, which are up to 80cm deep, using a series of walkways that run in and out of the building. At night, the interior is lit up with blue light.


An exterior view of Olafur Eliasson’s Life installation at the Fondation Beyeler
Courtesy of the artist; neugerriemschneider; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. © 2021 Olafur Eliasson, Photo: Mark Niedermann

Eliasson has also dyed the water a fluorescent green and filled it with pond plants, including water lilies and shellflowers selected by the landscape architect Günther Vogt. The water has been coloured using uranine, an organic dye that is commonly used to observe water currents, and which Eliasson has used previously for his Green River (1998) work where he dyed rivers in cities such as Stockholm, Tokyo and Los Angeles.


Installation view of Olafur Eliasson’s Life installation
Courtesy of the artist; neugerriemschneider; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. © 2021 Olafur Eliasson, Photo: Pati Grabowicz

In an accompanying artist statement, Eliasson writes: “Together with the museum, I am giving up control over the artwork, so to speak, handing it over to human and non-human visitors, to plants, microorganisms, the weather, the climate—many of these elements that museums usually work very hard to keep out.”

The southern side of the building will be open to the elements for the duration of the show, which ends in July. Eliasson writes that “even if no human visitors are in the space, other beings—insects, bats, or birds, for instance—can fly through or take up temporary abode within it.” This possibility is very much part of the work, with the artist adding that when he first spoke to the museum’s director Sam Keller about ideas for the show, he thought to himself: “Why don’t we invite everyone to the show? Let’s invite the planet—plants and various species”.


A night view of Olafur Eliasson’s Life
Courtesy of the artist; neugerriemschneider; Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. © 2021 Olafur Eliasson, Photo: Mark Niedermann

Although Eliasson states that “there are no opening or closing hours for the exhibition”, the museum is only open to human visitors between 9am and 9pm, with timed tickets needed (and numbers limited by Covid-19 restrictions). For those unable to visit the show, there is a livestream of the exhibition using cameras fitted with different optical filters that “allude to non-human perspectives”.

Life, Fondation Beyeler, Basel, until July





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