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Rémy Zaugg: The Particular Place
For the Association of the Friends of Rémy Zaugg, edited by Eva Schmidt
texts (German/English) by Simon Baur, Dorothea Braun and Conradin Weder, Mathilde de Croix, Corinne Disernes, Christoph Doswald, Roman Kurzmeyer, Gerhard Mack, Hans Rudolf Reust, Jean-Christoph Royoux, Hinrich Sachs, Eva Schmidt, Nicole Seeberger, conversation with Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron by Gerhad Mack, with Adrian Schiess by Ulrich Loock and with Jean-Damien Colling by Franck Gautherot
480 p with 420 coloured illustrations
295 x 230 mm, softcover
ISBN 978-3-86442-367-3
BUT I / WORLD / I SEE / YOU
Rémy Zaugg (1943–2005) was an internationally renowned artist who lived and worked in Basel and Mulhouse. He saw himself as a painter, yet he would not limit himself solely to the production of images. Rather, from his painterly practice he generated general assumptions for a processual conception of the work that enabled him to view spatial, architectural, and urban contexts in new, unfamiliar ways. Accordingly, the perceiving human being as a member of society was always at the center of his considerations – all his aesthetic assumptions led to the emancipatory idea of the »becoming« subject. In addition to his extensive painterly and written oeuvre, it is therefore his activities and projects for and in public space that are essential for understanding Zaugg’s particular artistic position. The book is dedicated to this socially relevant complex of topics, documenting all of the artist’s respective realized and unrealized projects, with a particular focus on the following key aspects of his work: museum architecture (here in particular his collaboration with Herzog & de Meuron), exhibitions with works by other artists, art in public spaces as well as his preoccupation, in both theoretical and practical terms, with artistic methodology, cooperation and the work concept. The artist was friends with Herzog & de Meuron and also collaborated with them on urban design issues. In Gerhard Mack's informative interview with the two architects, Jacques Herzog concludes, on the space the two acquired from Rémy Zaugg: »I simply like knowing that he is near us and will continue to be an influence when we are no longer around. So in that respect, it’s a tribute, a place where Rémy is present. But at the same time, the room with all its complex history is also a refernce to us, a kind of key to our own work.«