Andrea Hasler: Shifting Commodities
2020, C-Type Metallic Print, 44.8 x 60 cm, Edition of 200, Signed and numbered by the artist
As part of The Great Pause... exhibition the Foundation supported in Summer of 2020, Swiss artist Andrea Hasler was asked to develop a new work in response to the world at an extraordinary time. A world affected by the global pandemic of the Coronavirus.
Hasler was part of our 2014 Artist Residency and is a Swiss artist based in London whose wax and mixed media sculptures are characterized by a tension between attraction and repulsion. Fascinated with the psychological aspect of the body, the artist works at the borderline of inside/outside, something that is aesthetically desirable, yet revolting and were viewer’s attraction are replaced by repulsion, power, control and impotence.
2020, C-Type Metallic Print, 44.8 x 60 cm, Edition of 200, Signed and numbered by the artist
As part of The Great Pause... exhibition the Foundation supported in Summer of 2020, Swiss artist Andrea Hasler was asked to develop a new work in response to the world at an extraordinary time. A world affected by the global pandemic of the Coronavirus.
Hasler was part of our 2014 Artist Residency and is a Swiss artist based in London whose wax and mixed media sculptures are characterized by a tension between attraction and repulsion. Fascinated with the psychological aspect of the body, the artist works at the borderline of inside/outside, something that is aesthetically desirable, yet revolting and were viewer’s attraction are replaced by repulsion, power, control and impotence.
2020, C-Type Metallic Print, 44.8 x 60 cm, Edition of 200, Signed and numbered by the artist
As part of The Great Pause... exhibition the Foundation supported in Summer of 2020, Swiss artist Andrea Hasler was asked to develop a new work in response to the world at an extraordinary time. A world affected by the global pandemic of the Coronavirus.
Hasler was part of our 2014 Artist Residency and is a Swiss artist based in London whose wax and mixed media sculptures are characterized by a tension between attraction and repulsion. Fascinated with the psychological aspect of the body, the artist works at the borderline of inside/outside, something that is aesthetically desirable, yet revolting and were viewer’s attraction are replaced by repulsion, power, control and impotence.