Sculpture on the Move 1946–2016
In 2002, the Kunstmuseum Basel presented the exhibition “Painting on the Move”. At three locations in Basel—the Kunstmuseum and the Museum für Gegenwartskunst as well as the Kunsthalle—the show traced a long arc from the early twentieth to the dawn of the twenty-first century and invited audiences to experience the different ways painters had explored and scrutinized their world.
“Sculpture on the Move” is a curatorial matching piece that focuses on sculptural art between the end of World War II and the present. The grand special exhibition on occasion of the inauguration of the enlarged Kunstmuseum Basel will map the medium’s extraordinarily dynamic evolution: the classical idea and form of sculpture grows more flexible and abstract as some artists integrate the trivial stuff of everyday life into their art or blur its spatial and conceptual boundaries, even as others return to the figurative tradition in an effort to set the genre on a new solid foundation. Selected works from the collections of the Kunstmuseum Basel and eminent pieces on loan from international museums and private collections will be brought together for a dense and exceptionally rich dialogue of positions in sculpture.
The exhibition opens with late works by Constantin Brancusi and Alberto Giacometti, two defining artists of the twentieth century, in the skylit galleries Christ & Gantenbein architects have created on the second floor of the new building. It continues with a loosely chronological arrangement highlighting various thematic emphases in sculpture between the 1940s and the 1970s, with exemplary works by Alexander Calder, Hans Arp, Max Bill, Henry Moore, Louise Bourgeois, Pablo Picasso, Eduardo Chillida, David Smith, Jean Tinguely, Claes Oldenburg, Duane Hanson, John Chamberlain, Donald Judd, Carl Andre, Joseph Beuys, Mario Merz, Bruce Nauman, Eva Hesse, Richard Serra, Robert Smithson, and others.
The sequence then moves to the ground floor of the new building, where sculptural works from the 1980s by Peter Fischli and David Weiss, Robert Gober, Charles Ray, Mike Kelley, Jeff Koons, Katharina Fritsch, Franz West, and others will be display, and concludes in the Museum für Gegenwartskunst with a survey of significant positions between the 1990s and the present, featuring sculptures by artists such as Gabriel Orozco, Matthew Barney, Absalon, Damien Hirst, Danh Vo, Monika Sosnowska, and Oscar Tuazon.
OPENING TIMES:
Tue 10am – 6pm
Wed 10am – 8pm
Thu – Sun 10am – 6pm
ART BASEL:
Mon – Sun 9am – 6pm
Thu 10am – 6 pm
CLOSING DAYS:
Mon
ADMISSION:
Ticket
M: pressoffice@kunstmuseumbasel.ch
Website
ADDRESS
Kunstmuseum Basel, St. Alban-Graben 16, 4051 Basel, Switzerland
ESTABLISHED
1661