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The Salzburg Foundation and its art projects in Salzburg 2002 - 2007
Anselm Kiefer, Mario Merz, Marina Abramovic, Markus Lüpertz, James Turrell
Idea and objectives Since 2002 the Salzburg Foundation has installed works of art by renowned, contemporary, international artists with a great deal of commitment. A top-class artist is chosen each year by an independent, international board of trustees and invited to Salzburg, where he/she develops the art concept for a public artwork in and for the city. The project plans to deliver an urban art and sculpture park of the highest quality within a period of 10 years.
1st art project in Salzburg: Anselm Kiefer, "A.E.I.O.U.," 2002 Furtwängler Park across from the Festival Hall First artist featured by the Salzburg Foundation Anselm Kiefer and his work A.E.I.O.U. The work of art features a large-format picture, a shelf with leaden books and writing on the wall. The building, located in the Furtwängler Park, was built and furnished according to the artist's instructions.
2nd art project in Salzburg: Mario Merz, "Numbers in the Forest," 2003 Mönchsberg, near the Museum of Modern Art The renowned Italian artist, Mario Merz, chose the Mönchsberg for his work of art, installed in a depression next to the water tower on the panoramic path near the new Museum of Modern Art. The igloo consists of 12 bent stainless steel pipes, all brushed to a matt finish. On top, the artist has sprinkled 21 neon numbers, which shine out across the city at night.
3rd art project in Salzburg: Marina Abramovic, "Spirit of Mozart," 2004 At the State Bridge The "Spirit of Mozart" by the performance and video artist, Marina Abramovic, is an "interactive sculpture" consisting of an ensemble of chairs, set up by the artist on a virtual stage. A fifteen-meter chair is surrounded by eight other chairs, on which the public is invited to sit. The stainless-steel installation is an offer as well as an invitation to visitors, who are called upon to meditate. The site was deliberately chosen in the bustling inner city.
4th art project in Salzburg: Markus Lüpertz, "Mozart - a Homage," 2005 Ursulines Square The German painter and sculptor, Markus Lüpertz, designed an impressive "Homage to Mozart“ for the fourth art project in Salzburg, a bronze, 2.95-meter, painted statue. Lüpertz chose the Ursulines Square, enclosed by the Mönchsberg wall, the Klaus Gate and the Salzach River, as the location for his work of art. His "Mozart“ uses the traditional sculpting approach, although the painter-cum-sculptor cannot be denied.
5th art project in Salzburg: James Turrell, "SKYSPACE," 2006 Mönchsberg, near the Museum of Modern Art The American artist, James Turrell, internationally renowned for his light installations, created a "SKYSPACE“ on the Mönchsberg for the city of Salzburg. His work is a walk-in room shaped like an elliptic cylinder with benches along the edge for visitors to sit to view the sky through an opening in the roof. The artist uses the light and space from the visible part of the sky as his primary mediums.
6th Art Project in Salzburg: Stephan Balkenhol – "Sphaera" and "Woman in Rock", 2007 "Sphaera“ (Chapter Square) and "Woman in Rock“ (Toscaninihof) Stephan Balkenhol has long-standing experience in the presentation of art in public places. He succeeds in creating surprising encounters in unusual places with his sculptures. Stephan Balkenhol created two sculptures for Salzburg: a man on a spherical body ("Sphaera“) and a woman in a rock wall ("Woman in Rock"), one exposes a sculpture without being pathetic, the other with great silence yet no less powerful.
Sponsorship Credit Suisse Deutschland AG Dr.h.c. Erich Schumann (WAZ Mediengruppe)
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