Urs Fischer: Small Axe

The Garage Museum of Contemporary Art - Moscow, Russia June 10th, 2016

  • Urs Fischer, 2014

Small Axe also extends to Garage Square, where Fischer will stage the largest collaborative outdoor project he has ever made, which is called YES. The piece involves inviting people from all walks of life to create a landscape of clay sculptures that will metamorphose over the course of the show.  The open process through which the work comes together—contrasted with the contained process of creation in the studio—echoes the importance of communal activity and unregulated synergetic forces within society. For the first week of the project, running up to Garage’s one-year anniversary and Russia Day celebrations, Fischer has also invited his longtime collaborators Mina Stone and Alex Eagleton to prepare meals for the project volunteers and participants.  Working in Moscow for the first time, the chefs will use local seasonal produce to create a different menu every day.

A third aspect to Small Axe will be presented in July in Garage’s West Gallery, where Fischer has worked with the Garage team to create a communal space through which to discover more about the YES project and the artist.

Organized by Kate Fowle, Garage Chief Curator, with Snejana Krasteva and Anastasia Mityushina, Garage Curators.

 

About YES

YES is an ongoing project initiated by Fischer in 2011 and most recently staged in 2015 at the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds, UK. For every staging, Fischer’s collaborators are given complete freedom to mold tons of clay into giant objects or tiny sculptures. For the Moscow iteration, the artist will work with volunteers from various art schools, including the British Higher School of Art and Design, Moscow Architectural Institute (MARCHI), Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts, and Surikov Art Institute, as well as visitors to Gorky Park.