Reading Duchamp, Research Notes 2007-2014

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The Welsh artist is interested in Duchamp as the intellectual father of conceptual art. She too is fascinated by puns, ideograms and symbols. Duchamp’s oeuvre, his readymades and installation with richly evocative titles, still full of unsolved riddles today, enticed Bethan Huws into speculating on the meanings of and encoding the obscure references. Through her many years of intensive investigation of Duchamp she developed her own profound referential framework and a highly original interpretation of the older artist’s ideas. With texts, photographs and notes on the artworks she has created a research laboratory, a kind of artistic mind map, opening a window onto understanding her threads of thought.Writing makes up the core of Bethan Huws’s
artistic practice. Born in north Wales in 1961, the artist says that the
process of writing always helps her find clarity of thought. Her reflections
flow forth in language experiments, taking the shapes of drawings, sculptures,
photographs, films or performances and are always part of a specific context.
The act of reading thus also transports us into associative contexts in which
the reader can trace signs of our Western culture by means of puns packed full
with subtle irony and in the shape of ambiguous codes. That is, eye to eye with
Duchamp. What she produces is a quiet art full of poetry and exquisite humor in
stark contrast to the great spectacles that now predominate among exhibitions;
it is a reflection on contemporary art historiography and the artistic claim to
sovereignty of interpretation.   Bethan Huws was born in 1961 in Bangor, Wales.
She studied at Middlesex Polytechnic (1981–85) and at the Royal College of Art
(1986–88) in London. She lives and works in Paris and Berlin. Especially her
“Word Vitrines”
made her famous as well as her readymades, objects and videos. Since 1999,
the Kunstmuseum Bern and the Kunsthalle Bern Foundation collect the work of the
Welsh conceptual artist.   An artist’s book with all her research notes will be published for the exhibition:BETHAN HUWS. RESEARCH NOTES
Edited by Dieter Association, Paris.
Essay by Hans Rudolf Reust
(English / German / French). Graphic
design by Myriam Barchechat, Paris.
684 pages, 523 images. Verlag der
Buchhandlung Walther König, Köln
2014. ISBN 978-3-86335-647-7.
This publication is supported by
Berliner Künstlerprogramm/DAAD,
Kunstmuseum Bern and Maria & Henry
Wegmann-Müller, Winterthur.

Kunstmuseum Bern
Hodlerstrasse 12
3000 Bern
Switzerland
Array
http://www.kunstmuseumbern.ch/en/see/today/361-bethan-h...

Selection of further exhibitions in: Switzerland

01.08.2016 - 01.01.2030
Landesmuseum Zürich
Museumstrasse 2
Zürich

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01.01.2016 - 01.01.2030
Landesmuseum Zürich
Museumstrasse 2
Zürich

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Reading Duchamp, Research Notes 2007-2014 Kunstmuseum Bern Main address: Kunstmuseum Bern Hodlerstrasse 12 3000 Bern, Switzerland Kunstmuseum Bern Hodlerstrasse 12 3000 Bern, Switzerland The Welsh artist is interested in Duchamp as the intellectual father of conceptual art. She too is fascinated by puns, ideograms and symbols. Duchamp’s oeuvre, his readymades and installation with richly evocative titles, still full of unsolved riddles today, enticed Bethan Huws into speculating on the meanings of and encoding the obscure references. Through her many years of intensive investigation of Duchamp she developed her own profound referential framework and a highly original interpretation of the older artist’s ideas. With texts, photographs and notes on the artworks she has created a research laboratory, a kind of artistic mind map, opening a window onto understanding her threads of thought.Writing makes up the core of Bethan Huws’s
artistic practice. Born in north Wales in 1961, the artist says that the
process of writing always helps her find clarity of thought. Her reflections
flow forth in language experiments, taking the shapes of drawings, sculptures,
photographs, films or performances and are always part of a specific context.
The act of reading thus also transports us into associative contexts in which
the reader can trace signs of our Western culture by means of puns packed full
with subtle irony and in the shape of ambiguous codes. That is, eye to eye with
Duchamp. What she produces is a quiet art full of poetry and exquisite humor in
stark contrast to the great spectacles that now predominate among exhibitions;
it is a reflection on contemporary art historiography and the artistic claim to
sovereignty of interpretation.   Bethan Huws was born in 1961 in Bangor, Wales.
She studied at Middlesex Polytechnic (1981–85) and at the Royal College of Art
(1986–88) in London. She lives and works in Paris and Berlin. Especially her
“Word Vitrines”
made her famous as well as her readymades, objects and videos. Since 1999,
the Kunstmuseum Bern and the Kunsthalle Bern Foundation collect the work of the
Welsh conceptual artist.   An artist’s book with all her research notes will be published for the exhibition:BETHAN HUWS. RESEARCH NOTES
Edited by Dieter Association, Paris.
Essay by Hans Rudolf Reust
(English / German / French). Graphic
design by Myriam Barchechat, Paris.
684 pages, 523 images. Verlag der
Buchhandlung Walther König, Köln
2014. ISBN 978-3-86335-647-7.
This publication is supported by
Berliner Künstlerprogramm/DAAD,
Kunstmuseum Bern and Maria & Henry
Wegmann-Müller, Winterthur.
Book tickets