Marc-Olivier Wahler

Marc-Olivier Wahler (born 1964, in Neuchâtel, Switzerland) is a prominent international curator and contemporary art critic and art historian. Wahler currently serves as Founding Director of the Chalet Society, Paris; Artistic Advisor for De Appel Arts Center, Amsterdam and CI Contemporary Istanbul; and Founding Director of Transformer Sculpture Park, Melides, Portugal. He is the former Director of Palais de Tokyo, Paris, the Founding Editor of Palais/ magazine, the former Director of the Swiss Institute, New York, and the Co-founding Director of the CAN Centre d’art Neuchâtel, Switzerland.

Life and career

After having studied philosophy and art history in Neuchâtel, Lausanne and Geneva, he began his career as a museum curator in 1992 at the Cantonal Museum of Fine Arts in Lausanne and then at MAMCO in Geneva. In 1995, he co-founded the CAN (Art Center of Neuchâtel) and was its director until 2000, when he became the director of the Swiss Institute in New York (2000-2006).

During the last twenty years, Wahler has organized over 400 exhibitions.

In 2011, he was decorated as a Chevalier in the French Republic's Order of Arts and Letters. In 2013, Wahler was awarded the Meret Oppenheim Prize, Switzerland highest cultural award in the contemporary arts.

CAN - Centre d'art Neuchâtel

Wahler co-founded CAN Centre d’art Neuchâtel, Switzerland in 1995, and ran it until 2000. Under his artistic directorship, CAN organized solo shows with Gianni Motti (1995), Olivier Mosset (1996), Jonathan Monk (1997), Steven Parrino (1998), and Roman Signer (1999).Group shows included artists such as Philippe Parreno (1995), Franz West (1995), Fischli & Weiss (1996), Mike Kelley (1996), Paul McCarthy (1996), Ugo Rondinone (1996), Jessica Bronson (1997), Matthew Ritchie (1997), Pavel Pepperstein (1999), and Robert McCollum (1999).[1]

Swiss Institute, New York

From 2000 to 2006, Wahler ran the Swiss Institute in New York and curated large projects with artists such as Christoph Büchel, Jim Shaw, Ugo Rondinone, Valentin Carron, Urs Fischer, Takashi Murakami, Martin Creed, and Aleksandra Mir.

Palais de Tokyo, Paris

From 2006-2012, Wahler was the director of the Palais de Tokyo, one of the most frequently visited contemporary art centers in Europe. Wahler is known for creating a museum that breaks down barriers between high and low culture and different artistic mediums (such as architecture, fine arts, dance, literature, theatre, and music).[2]

As director of Palais de Tokyo, he set the current pace of 30 to 40 exhibitions a year. The solo shows have included such artists as Tatiana Trouvé, Peter Coffin, Steven Parrino, Jonathan Monk, Roman Signer, Christoph Büchel, Paul Laffoley, Joe Coleman, Loris Gréaud, Charlotte Posenenske, Micol Assael, Ceal Floyer, Michel Blazy, Ulla von Brandenburg, Camille Henrot, and Oscar Tuazon.

Wahler's first show at Palais de Tokyo was Five Billion Years (2006), which served as a prologue for his six-year curatorial program. His later group shows dealt with the limits between what is visible and invisible: M, News From the Upside-Down (2007), La Marque Noire (2007), Superdome (2008), Gakona (2009), and Spy Numbers (2009). Next, Chasing Napoleon (2009-2010) examined the notion of disappearance.

In 2011, Wahler curated Dynasty with Fabrice Hergott, the director of the Museum of Modern Art, Paris. They exhibited a total of 80 works from 40 French artists under the age of 35 in both the Palais de Tokyo and the Museum of Modern Art, Paris.[3] In addition to Dynasty, Wahler created the Modules, a series of art exhibits which often presented emergent artists. A review noted that "under Mr. Wahler, the Palais de Tokyo has become one of the city’s best springboards for young artists."[4]

Wahler might be best known for adding a rooftop hotel and a rooftop restaurant, to the already existent bookstore and restaurant Tokyo-eat.[5] He installed the Lang and Baumann artist project Everland Hotel (a one-room hotel room available to the public) on the museum's roof.[6] Wahler removed Everland after a year and replaced it with Laurent Grasso's artist project Nomiya, a one-room restaurant for 12 people.[7]

Chalet Society, Paris

Wahler is the founder and director of a new structure, The Chalet Society, designed to encourage reflection on contemporary art institutions and to investigate new possibilities for exhibitions by testing forms, spaces, discourses, and protocols. The mobile structure endeavors to develop formats that work on a variety of platforms, similar to open source software that can run on any hardware. The Chalet Society reacts to the boldest artistic settings and acts itself as a community of artists, collectors, researchers, and other enthusiasts, searching for “poetic consciousness,” an idea attributed to Saul Wahl Katzenellenbogen - crowned King of Poland in 1587. He only reigned for one night but had enough time to pronounce a number of predictions and appeal for the dawn of “poetic consciousness.”

Launched in October 2012 in a pop-up site – a disused school in the heart of Paris – the Chalet Society presented a variety of extraordinary self-taught or unknown artists in collaboration with the Museum of Everything.[8][9]

After having tested the limits of the commonly accepted notion of artist, the Chalet Society created the “Tester’s Salon” in the summer of 2013, a project by the art critic Christophe Kihm and the artists Arnaud and Bertrand Dezoteux. Here more than 40 artists were invited to reflect on testing an extensive range of exhibition formats.

In fall 2013 after the self-taught ‘outsider’ artists, the exhibition The Hidden World, designed by the artist Jim Shaw, focused on artists who – while producing for specific commissions – have often got lost behind their intentions. Shaw collected over the past 40 years diverse didactic material, creating “a breathtaking and expansive journey through the myths and beliefs of America.”[10]

Independent Curator / writer

As an independent curator, Marc-Olivier Wahler has curated numerous group shows, notably the decennial Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition Transfer. Art in Urban Space (Biel, 2000), Liquid Sky (Frac Bourgogne, 2003), OK / OKAY (Grey Art Gallery, NYU, 2003), Medio Dia - Media Noce (Centro Cultural Recoleta, Buenos Aires and Macro, Rosario, 2007), Lost (in LA) (LAMAG, Los Angeles, 2012),[11] and From Triple X to Birdsong (KayneGriffinCorcoran Gallery, Los Angeles, 2013).[12]

As an art critic, Marc-Olivier Wahler regularly writes on contemporary art and its theoretical problematic in international magazines, academic books and exhibition catalogues. His conferences in Europe, Asia, North Africa, and North and South America primarily focus on the form of the exhibition and the ways we currently speak about art.

References

  1. http://www.can.ch/spip.php?rubrique29
  2. Bjerke, Constantin (Oct 31, 2011). "Marc-Olivier Wahler Inspires Palais de Tokyo". Huffington Post. Retrieved Jan 12, 2013.
  3. http://www.artinamericamagazine.com/news-opinion/the-market/2010-06-29/dynasty-palais-de-tokyo-musee-dart-moderne/print/
  4. Nicolai Hartvig (October 28, 2011). "Paris Regains Some of Its Lost Aura in Art World". New York Times.
  5. "Despite its bourgeois address in the 16th Arrondissement, the Palais de Tokyo is the coolest museum in Paris: risk-taking, roomy and a little rough around the edges" (T Magazine, July 2, 2009). http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/02/paris-communal-art-meets-dinner-at-the-palais-de-tokyo/
  6. Currie, Nick (October 30, 2008). "The Post-Materialist | Paris Reborn". The New York Times.
  7. http://www.wallpaper.com/travel/fab-40-nomiya-restaurant-paris/3934
  8. http://www.anothermag.com/current/view/2290/The_Chalet_Society
  9. Matthew Rose (November 17, 2012). "From Obscurity to the Center of the City of Light". The Wall Street Journal. p. C22.
  10. Maaike Lauwaert, Artforum, December 2013. http://www.artforum.com/archive/id=44209
  11. http://www.flashartonline.com/interno.php?pagina=latalks_det&id_art=945&det=ok&articolo=Marc-Olivier-Wahler
  12. Frank, Priscilla (January 14, 2013). "Shifting Territories, Shifting Interpretations". Huffington Post.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.