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SUSAN PHILIPSZ: RETURNING: KUNSTVEREIN HANNOVER

Past exhibition
December 12, 2016 - February 26, 2017
  • Installation Views
  • Press release
Installation Views
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Susan Philipsz seven tears installation
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Susan Philipsz phtographs and sculpture
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: susan Philipsz sculptures on pedestals
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: white speaker hanging from ceiling
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: white speaker hanging from ceiling
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: salt painting
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Susan Philipsz photographs
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: sound installation
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: projected video installation
Press release

In recent years, Susan Philipsz (*1965 in Glasgow, lives and works in Berlin) has developed numerous arresting sound installations in public and institutional space. For more than two decades, the Scottish artist, who was awarded the Turner Prize in 2010, has devoted herself the rearrangement and interpretation of musical sources against the backdrop of site-specific conditions. The trained sculptor explores the spatial-qualities of qualities of sound and its emotional and cognitive effects. Many of her most recent works deal with existential themes such as trauma and grief.

 

With reference to Emil Berliner (1851–1929), who along with his brothers founded the Deutsche Grammophon Gesellschaft in 1898 in Hannover, at the Kunstverein Susan Philipsz is working for the first time with vinyl records as sound carriers. She recorded the sounds produced on the rims of glasses on seven records, each of which renders a note value from the suggestive composition “Lachrimae or Seven Tears” (1604) by John Dowland and addresses the motif of tears as well as the Baroque lament, which lend expression to the impermanence of happiness. In other new sound installations Philipsz also makes reference to regional settings—in one of these she works with the pipes of a historical synagogue organ that survived the Night of Broken Glass and has been in the Villa Seligmann in Hannover since 2011. At the same time, she continues her work with damaged instruments with a shofar (ram’s horn). Both sound compositions cause human presence to become palpable and address German-Jewish history.

 

The sounds of site-specific works develop and branch out in the circular path through the exhibition, become connected with photographs and films, and give rise to a powerful nexus of sound and space, past and present.

Related artist

  • Susan Philipsz TBG LA installation image.

    Susan Philipsz

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