Carsten Höller

Carsten Höller
Born December 1961
Brussels, Belgium
Nationality Belgian
Known for contemporary art
Movement relational aesthetics, installation art

Carsten Höller (born December 1961) is a Belgian artist.[1] He lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden. Today, he also shares a house in Ghana with colleague Marcel Odenbach.[2]

Early life and education

Born to German parents working for the European Economic Community, Höller grew up in Brussels.[3] He holds a doctorate in agricultural science, specializing in the area of insects' olfactory[4] communication strategies, from University of Kiel;[5] the title of his dissertation is "Efficiency Analysis of the Parasitoids of Cereal Aphids".[6] Only during the late 1980s did he first begin making art. However, he worked as a research entomologist until 1994.[7]

Work

Höller came to prominence in the 1990s alongside a group of artists including Maurizio Cattelan, Douglas Gordon,[2] Pierre Huyghe, Philippe Parreno, Rirkrit Tiravanija, and Andrea Zittel who worked across disciplines to reimagine the experience and the space of art.[8] In his work, Höller creates situations which question familiar forms of perception and allow exhibition visitors to experiment on themselves, often inviting the public's active participation in so-called "influential environments".[9] In their form, Höller's works are occasionally reminiscent of scientific laboratory arrangements, allowing the viewer to become the subject of an experiment.[5] His work since the early 1990s has encompassed buildings, vehicles, slides, toys, games, narcotics, animals, performances, lectures, 3D films, flashing lights, mirrors, eyewear and sensory deprivation tanks.[10]

Among Höller's works is a series of corkscrewing tubular metal slides made from 1998 that is an ongoing project.[11] Not only are slides a practical means of transportation, but the act of sliding down one produces a loss of control, inducing a particular state of mind related to freedom from constraint. His most famous slides include that made for the office of Miuccia Prada in Milan (2000) and the first slides made for the Berlin Biennale in 1998.[12]

Höller's artistic practice reflects the interaction between work and public in various ways, sometimes chemically analyzing the nature of human emotions. His avid interest in the double harks back to the start of his career, when Höller designed a series of works with his then girlfriend,[2] the artist Rosemarie Trockel, actually doubling himself up in another creator. Other examples include an exhibition in which Höller and Maurizio Cattelan presented a series of identical works at two different Paris galleries, removing all differences of style or ownership;[13] and his exhibition "One Day One Day" (2003) at Färgfabriken in Stockholm, where two works were shown opposite each other and changed every day without the public’s knowledge.[14] His explorations often involve playful elements such as in Sliding Doors (2003), a series of electronic sliding doors with a mirrored surface through which the audience passes in a seemingly endless passage.[12] In 2008, Höller installed The Revolving Hotel Room, a hotel room for two, as part of an exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum, New York.[15] At his 2010 show at the Hamburger Bahnhof, visitors could pay 1,000 euros ($1,370) for a night on an exposed circular platform perched above 12 castrated reindeer, 24 canaries, eight mice and two flies.[16] In Psycho Tank, which can be used alone or with others, visitors float weightlessly on the surface of a sensory deprivation pool, providing a strange out-of-body experience[8] Equally encouraging visitors' participation, Pill Clock (2011) is an aperture which emits a white pill into a growing pile of the same every 15 seconds.[17]

Mushrooms became a regular feature of Höller's work from 1994.[18] He has since realized several works with the fly-agaric mushroom, including the Mushroom Suitcase series (2001/2008) and the Upside Down Mushroom Room (2000), which was shown in 2000 at Fondazione Prada in Milan and in 2005 at MOCA in Los Angeles. His fly-agaric replicas are large-scale and often spin or hang upside down from the ceiling. The artist has also created photographic works based on the fly-agaric, entitled Mushroom Print (2003) and Soma Series (2008).[19] In a series of giant sculptures of funghi – Giant Triple Mushrooms (2010) –, two quarters of each sculpture replicate the looks of two random fungi; half, a very specific species: the large red-and-white fly agaric fungus, Amanita muscaria, occurring wild in Eurasia. A fungus with psychoactive, hallucinogenic properties, it was used, it is thought, by Siberian shamans as an intoxicant.[20]

Animals have figured largely in Höller’s work, most prominently at his exhibition Soma at the Hamburger Bahnhof, where two herds of reindeer were housed in the large main exhibition hall, along with canaries, mice and flies. The project was modeled after a scientific experiment. Other works that include animals include House for Pigs and People, a construction Höller made with Rosemarie Trockel that was exhibited in documenta X, which Höller described as a "monument of incomprehensibility. The amazement that comes back every time we observe an animal… the pigs are so similar to us, they set off strong biophile sentiments, mainly among children…." In a conversation with Daniel Birnbaum, Höller continues, "…It is difficult for us to believe that our consciousness—my consciousness—can correspond to an other’s. Only if others behave like me, am I prepared to accept it—and still consider my own being unique, as do all other humans. Perhaps it is only this uniqueness that a bird doesn’t believe in. Is it missing the process of a feedback with its ‹own›". Other animal works include Loverfinches (1992-1994), Aquarium (1996), The Belgian Problem (2007), Singing Canaries Mobile (2009), and, with Rosemarie Trockel, Mosquito Bus (1996), Addina (1997), Bee House (1999), Silverfish House (1999) and Eyeball: a House for Pigeons, People, and Rats (2000).[21]

On 18 June 2014 the 31-meter-high observation tower Vitra Slide Tower in Weil am Rhein was inaugurated.

Höller is represented by Air de Paris, Paris; Massimo de Carlo, Milan; and Gagosian Gallery, London, New York, and Los Angeles.

Notable works, projects, and exhibitions

Slides

Test Site at the Tate Modern

For the seventh commission in The Unilever Series, in Tate Modern's Turbine Hall, Höller created Test Site, an installment in his ongoing series of slide works which started in 1998.[22] Höller’s interest in slides ranges from their use as a practical and alternative means of transportation and the effect of sliding itself, which involves a loss of control, vertigo and an emotional response from the sliders, often delight. He is also interested in the shape of slides as a counterpoint to rectangular architecture, as in the Turbine Hall.[23]

Earlier slide works include Valerio I and Valerio II, which were installed at Kunst-Werke in Berlin in 1998 and 1999. Höller described their title, "The Valerio Phenomenon…supposedly originated at a rock concert in Italy. It’s an interesting example of mass hysteria. A sound technician at a concert disappeared, and someone in the audience, pretending to know his name, shouted 'Valerio!', and more and more people joined in. It was apparently infectious, and it spread from Brindisi to Rimini and other cities. There is something about the sound of this name that makes you want to shout it loud. You feel a little better after you’ve done it, just like after having traveled down a slide."[24]

In an essay about Test Site, Dorothea von Hantelmann compares Höller’s slides to Nietzsche’s ideas regarding art and science as two different powers that inform culture in distinct ways. "When Nietzche speaks of art’s potential to create intensities and vital energies, for him these creations are extraordinary—but they need not be true. While the scientist deals with truth and its cognition, the artist, after Nietzche, creates and transforms reality."[25]

In his exhibition Experience at the New Museum in New York in 2011/2012, a slide was installed inside, spiraling straight through the third and fourth floors of the museum, ejecting the sliders on the second floor.[26]

House for Pigs and People
The project House for Pigs and People, for documenta X in Kassel in 1997, was one of several collaborations realized by Höller in cooperation with the artist Rosemarie Trockel. It consisted of a box-like house structure with a concrete surface. Inside, the space was divided by a sheet of glass, separating two sections of the house—one side for pigs, the other side for people. The partition was one-way mirror glass, enabling the people to see the pigs, but not the other way around. The piece is a metaphor of ecological and social division, as well as an epistemological critique.[27]

In a book produced for the project, Höller and Trockel contribute a text that consists of a series of questions involving the relationship between humans and animals. Some of the questions ask: "Does not human consciousness originate primarily as a project of the sociological conditions of its coming into being? Doesn’t animal consciousness have to be something quite different, something we cannot imagine? Or is there a basic measure of consciousness, which is part of man’s biological makeup and also occurs in animals?"[28]

The Double Club
The Double Club was a project in the form of a bar, restaurant and nightclub produced in collaboration with Fondazione Prada. It was installed in a warehouse in Islington, London, and was open from 20 November 2008 – 12 July 2009. The club was divided into equal amounts of floor space representing the "Congo" and the "West". Each division contained exclusively elements from each culture, including the furnishings and wall decors.[29][30]

Höller’s interaction with the culture of the Congo began when he started making regular visits to Kinshasa since 2001, interested in the role of music on public opinion and in turn in effecting politics. In an interview with Hans Ulrich Obrist in 2009, Höller also explains that the impetus for the Double Club was also drawn from a fascination with the phi phenomenon, "…phi was of course interesting in a double sense…the jumping to and fro between two points, the eternal back and forth. And in that way this third form arises, which is an illusion and which moves, while the two other forms, by contrast, are fixed."[31]

The phi phenomenon was explored earlier in Höller’s Flicker Films, (2004 and 2005) which took footage from Congolese musicians and dancers presented on overlapping projections, which created a sculptural, quasi-holographic effect.[32]

Soma at Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin 2010. Photo credit: Tomislav Medak

SOMA
The exhibition Soma was installed at the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin in 2010. Its main element were 12 reindeer in two pens running the length of the former railway station. Half of the reindeer were fed the fly agaric mushrooms in their food, which are part of their customary diet in the wild, and turn their urine into a hallucinogen. The reindeer urine was collected by handlers and then stored in on-site refrigerators for use. The experiment was extended to canaries, which were housed in two hanging cage pieces, to mice, and to flies. A mushroom-shaped Elevator Bed was installed in the middle of the space, and visitors could spend the night on the premise for a fee.

The title Soma comes from the name of the sacred libation drunk by the Indo-European followers of the Vedic religion, Hinduism's 5,000-year-old parent. Its ancient text, the Rigveda, contains 114 hymns to "creative juice", supposed to offer immortality. The recipe was lost, but in the 1960s researcher Robert Wasson hypothesised that soma was based on the fly agaric mushroom.[33]

Killing Children
Höller’s Killing Children works are discreet objects made between 1990 and 1994. Some consist of such things as a comforter containing a piece of dried fly agaric titled Sucette aux Fausses Oranges, a trap made from an upside-down playpen baited with a Kinder Schokolade egg attached to fishing wire titled Komm Kleines, kriegst was Feines, a bicycle for children rigged with a fuse, match, and petrol titled Bicycle Bomb, a piece titled 220 Volt consisting of plugs, connecting cable and candy. Three Venomous Frogs from Costa Rica in a Bottle is a piece that is just that: dangerous frogs submerged in water in a baby’s bottle. The works in this series have been usually installed on bright bubble-gum pink carpet.[34]

Carousels
Höller’s carousels (sometimes spelled carrousel, with two R’s, intentionally like the original word in French) and amusement park works, are some of his most well-known projects. Dating back to 1998, the key feature with Höller’s carousels are that they are modified in some way than what we expect from an amusement park ride, either most often through speed, or sometimes rotational direction, or surface material, as is the case with his Mirror Carousel (2005). In his exhibition Amusement Park at MASS MoCA in North Adams, 2006, the degree of slowness and direction changed every day. A local fairground operator, Art Gillette, engineered the changes.

In a catalogue essay for Höller’s 2008 exhibition at Kunsthaus Bregenz, Carl Roitmeister writes of the carrousel works, "This is the age-old artistic ploy of defamiliarizing the commonplace in combination with the age-old artistic ploy represented by the Duchamp-style readymade. But two age-old ploys do not add up to a new one…The title of the carrousel, R B Ride, doesn’t get us anywhere, because R B merely stands for Robles Bouso, the name of the now-defunct Spanish company that made the fairground device. The year of manufacture is 1969, the year of the failed revolution." Roitmeister goes on to make comparisons of the failure of the revolution with the action of the carrousel, the revolution of a clock, or time passing, in relation to the fact that the carousels move at a reduced speed, another failure—the failure to produce amusement. He goes further to say that "the carrousel resembles a huge clock—that is, a time-measuring device rather than a time-diverting machine…"[35]

For Höller’s exhibition in 2011 at MACRO, he showed Double Carousel with Zöllner Stripes (2011). The pair of carousels anthropomorphically suggests a couple, "I thought it would be nice to have two [merry-go-rounds] interacting as if they were in love or something. To bring people together and then further away ... It is romantic and tragic at the same time."[36][37]

Light Wall and Lichtraum
Light Wall I (2000), Light Wall II (2001), Light Wall III (2002), Light Wall IV (2007), constitute a series of variable Light Walls consisting of at least nine panels. Each panel holds a grid of light bulbs flickering at a frequency of between seven and twelve hertz, combined with a clicking stereo signal that continues back and forth between two audio speakers. This induces optic and acoustic hallucinations: viewers experience modulating fields of color with their eyes open or shut, or perceive themselves or what is said by others around them in altered ways. The incessant turning on and off of the lights—in contrast to strobe lights—primarily induces, due to the slow illumination rate of the filaments, an erratic state of mind caught "between" poles of light/dark, awake/asleep, I/other, etc. Lichtraum (2008), as installed at Kunsthaus Bregenz, consisted of four walls of the exhibition space, each covered by thousands of LED lights. Since given the imposing scale of the surfaces, the lights are always seen out of the corner of the eye, one’s proprioception is affected so that one forms an "intuited" revolving.[38]

Publications

Books

Catalogues

References

  1. Mead Carney (2013), Carsten Höller.
  2. 1 2 3 Alice Rawsthorn (January 2012), "Cliff Hanger - The Ghanaian home of artists Carsten Höller and Marcel Odenbach goes above—and beyond", W Magazine.
  3. Hester Lacey (13 May 2011), "The Inventory: Carsten Höller", Financial Times Magazine.
  4. Carsten Höller Enel Contemporanea.
  5. 1 2 Carsten Höller "Carrousel" - Kunsthaus Bregenz
  6. Carsten Höller, Christian Borgemeister, Helmut Haardt and Wilf Powell,"The Relationship between Primary Parasitoids and Hyperparasitoids of Cereal Aphids: An Analysis of Field Data", Journal of Animal Ecology, Vol. 62, No. 1 (January 1993), pp. 12–21.
  7. Jonathan Jones (13 October 2006), The Guardian profile: Carsten Höller, The Guardian.
  8. 1 2 Carsten Höller: Experience, 26 October 2011 – 15 January 2012 Archived 22 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. New Museum, New York.
  9. Nazanin Lankarani (22 March 2011), "Juxtaposing Works From Congo and Japan", The New York Times.
  10. Alex Farquharson, Before and After Science Archived 24 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Frieze Magazine, Issue 85, September 2004.
  11. Randy Kennedy (25 October 2011), Is It Art, Science or a Test of People? The New York Times.
  12. 1 2 "Carsten Höller to undertake next commission in The Unilever Series", Tate Modern, London.
  13. Massimiliano Gioni (22 August 2011), My Africa Domus 949, July/August 2011.
  14. Anna Sansom (8 March 2011), JAPANCONGO Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Frieze Magazine.
  15. Francesca Martin (27 August 2008), "A room for two at the Guggenhei"m, The Guardian.
  16. Catherine Hickley (25 November 2010), Magic-Mushroom Reindeer Bored by $1,370 Museum Slumber Parties Bloomberg.
  17. Kyle Chayka (26 October 2011), Take a Virtual Tour of Carsten Holler's Art Amusement Park at the New Museum Archived 28 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. ARTINFO.
  18. Charlotte Cripps (10 February 2010), J G Ballard: High impact on artists The Independent.
  19. Giant Triple Mushrooms - Carsten Höller, 29 May – 10 October 2010 Archived 11 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow.
  20. Charlotte Higgins (25 October 2011), "Carsten Höller in New York: all the fun of the fair", The Guardian.
  21. Holler, Carsten, and Daniel Birnbaum. Production: Birnbaum, Höller = Tuotanto. Helsinki: Kiasma, 2000. Print.
  22. "The Unilever Series: Carsten Höller: Test site". www.tate.org.uk. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  23. Carsten Höller: Test Site. London: Tate, 2006.
  24. Carsten Höller in Daniel Birnbaum and Carsten Höller, Tuotanto/Production, exh. cat., Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki 2000, p. 10.
  25. Carsten Höller: Test Site. London: Tate, 2006, p. 27.
  26. Kennedy, Randy. "Is It Art, Science or a Test of People?" The New York Times, 25 October 2011.
  27. Höller, Carsten, and Trockel, Rosemarie. A House for Pigs and People = Ein Haus für Schweine und Menschen. Köln: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König, 1997.
  28. Birnbaum, Daniel. "Mice And Man - Carsten Höller and Rosemarie Trockel", Artforum International, February 2001.
  29. Allen, Jennifer, Frieze, 25 November 2008.
  30. (London location), Collard, James, The Times of London, 18 November 2008.
  31. The Double Club. Milan: Fondazione Prada, 2011.
  32. Höller, Carsten and Barbara-Brigitte Mak. Höller 2001-2010: 184 Objects, Experiments, Events. Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2010. Print.
  33. Sam Williams (20 December 2010), "Carsten Höller: deer of perception", The Guardian.
  34. Höller, Carsten, and Germano Celant. Carsten Höller - Register: [in Occasion of Carsten Höller's Exhibition "Synchro System" at the Fondazione Prada, 22.XI.2000 - 7.I.2001]. Milano, 2000. Print.
  35. Roitmeister, Carl, Eckhard Schneider, and Carsten Höller. Carsten Höller, Carrousel [anlässlich Der Ausstellung Carsten Höller - Carrousel, 12. April Bis 1. Juni 2008, Kunsthaus Bregenz]. Köln: König, 2008. Print.
  36. Rachel Spence (16 December 2011), Just Höller Financial Times.
  37. Hilarie M. Sheets (29 January 2006), "Directions - Low-Speed Chase On Carousel Of the Mind", The New York Times.
  38. Höller, Carsten, Barbara-Brigitte Mak, and Erik Smith. Carsten Höller 2001-2010: 184 Objects, Experiments, Events. Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2010. Print.
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