Gregor Schneider (B. 1969)
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Gregor Schneider (B. 1969)

Kellerfenster

Details
Gregor Schneider (B. 1969)
Kellerfenster
signed, titled and dated 'G. Schneider, Kellerfenster, Totes Haus Ur Rheydt, 85-99' (on the reverse); signed twice, titled, dated and inscribed 'Schneider, Kellerfenster, 85-90, 2001, London+Venedig Milano' (on a separate board)
wood, plaster, cement metal grill and brackets
93¼ x 53 1/8 x 18¾in. (237 x 135 x 47.5cm.)
Executed in 1985-2001, this work is an element from the on-going installation 'Totes Haus ur'.
Exhibited
Vienna, Wiener Secession, 'Gregor Schneider', March - May 2000.
London, Royal Academy of the Arts, 'Apocalypse. Beauty and Horror in Contemporary Art', Sept. - Dec. 2000 (illustrated in the catalogue, p. 64).
Venice, German Pavilion, 49th Venice Biennale, 'Totes Haus Ur', June - Nov. 2001 (illustrated in the catalogue).
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

The focus of Gregor Schneider's work for the past fifteen years has been his house, 'Haus ur', in Rheydt, Germany. Originally his parents' home, he moved there in 1995, aged sixteen, and it has formed the core of his artistic practice ever since. Since then, Schneider has introduced so many structural changes that it could not be returned to its original layout without completely dismantling it first. Walls have been built in front of existing walls, windows blocked up, doorways altered. These elements combine with other devices to disrupt the way in which we interpret architectural space and to induce in the viewer intense feelings of fear mingled with curiosity and overwhelming claustrophobia: doors, floors and walls are made unnaturally dense, ceilings dip and rise, one room is on wheels that slowly turn the entire space so that you can never be sure of returning to the same place. What appear to be chinks of daylight glimmering through a dusty grate in the cellar turn out to be lit by a naked bulb beneath a black cloth; the gently billowing curtain signalling a breeze from an open window is generated by a hidden electric fan.

That a whole floor, or, in the case of the Venice Biennale, the entire house, are transplanted to other locations around the world, is, according to the artist, an elementary part of his work: "I might work elsewhere in order to make the place less important." The artist is more concerned with building a house for his soul. "As in Bluebeard's castle, a series of doors conceals we know not what unimaginable horrors or treasures. Schneider's house, like all others, is a place of privacy in which imagination, the most dangerous yet creative characteristic of human beings, can make itself visible without inhibition; our houses are the only place where we are really ourselves, where we sleep, where we are free to include or exclude whomsoever we wish. The house of Schneider suddenly seems quite normal - all too normal yet completely surprising, not a little sinister, as is everybody's house but our own. Schneider's house could be compared to the 'Merzbau' of Kurt Schwitters but it seems more pathological than autobiographical, more a house than a quasi-cathedral." (N. Rosenthal, in: 'Apocalypse. Beauty and Horror in Contemporary Art', London 2000).

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