MADULAIN.- For his carte blanche at
Stalla Madulain gallery, artist Rolf Sachs presents So ein Mist! (What B.S), a multidisciplinary exhibition spanning sculpture, installation, video, painting and works on paper. Consisting almost entirely of new work, with interventions both inside and outside, the artist envisioned So ein Mist! as a carefully orchestrated multisensorial and poetic journey. On view through March 17, the exhibition encapsulates much of Sachs enduring interest in materiality and recontextualizing everyday objects, all the while unveiling a series of never seen before paintings and drawings, his Défroissage series.
Many of the works in So ein Mist! subtly relate to Stalla Madulains history as an agricultural barn in the mountains. The hayloft, a stable on the middle floor where the animals lived, and the basement, which was used both as a storage room and as a slaughterhouse were subtly transformed in 2014 into three unique exhibition spaces which now showcase contemporary art. The space bears the patina of 500 years of mountain farming, respecting the original spirit and inherent tradition of the place. Stalla Madulain has a deep personal resonance for the artist as he grew up in the region.
The grand hayloft (tabla) hosts a series of deeply meditative and immersive site-specific works which flow as an ensemble. An expression of the artists sensorial relationship to the valley, the works displayed are a celebration of the innate poetry found in commonplace agricultural materials that would have once populated a place like Stalla Madulain. The visitors visual and sensory experience is enhanced by the barns open structure, allowing the outside elements to enter the gallery space.
We are greeted by Einsamkeit [Loneliness] (2023), a minimalist salt installation reflecting on mankinds solitary and existential experience in the surrounding mountain landscape. Looking up, the video installation Leise rieselt der Schnee [Silently the Snow Falls] (2016) enhances the artists scenographic approach and evokes the particularly magical experience of snow falling at night. The monumental vitrines Mist, Wolle, Heu and Ross (2023) are an homage to the archaic materials that could have been found in a barn like this one: manure, wool, hay, and horsehair. Their scale celebrates the materials tactility and vitality. The vitrines museum glass gives their content an immediate presence, making them almost like immersive portals. Part object, part abstract painting, these commonplace materials are elevated. On the wall opposite hangs Rocks (2016) consisting of sharply cut stones that the artist chose from the riverbed of the Inn river.
Although the works in the hayloft seek to elicit an emotional, sensory reaction, Sachs also deftly employs humour and wit, a strategy Sachs recurrently turns to (as seen in the exhibitions title). The hanging pink moped, a personal reference to him passing by Stalla Madulain during teenage clandestine escapes, adds salz in the suppe [salt in the soup] to what would be otherwise a contemplative room.
The stable (stalla) on the second floor unveils new paintings and works on paper. While this is a new venture for the artist, his pictorial approach is a continuation of an enduring interest in materiality, tactility and reinterpreting the conventional use of materials. As often in his work, the artist finds a certain freedom in letting things fall under the agency of chance. The process behind the Défroissage series is a perfect balance between faire et laisser faire. Sections of raw canvas are crumpled and creased, scrunched into a ball, a process that the artist sees as a sensual act. The canvas is then unfolded, and it is in this defroissage, that the surfaces character is unraveled. The unfolded canvas is then fixed with layers of resin, rendering the creased canvas part painting, part object. The sculpture Froissage Rose (2023) furthers that dialogue. Even with painting, Sachs is interested in making work that impacts us physically.
A blank piece of paper or canvas is unassuming, characterless, uninspiring. If you crush it, as to dispose of it, and then unfold it delicately, it remerges alive, with character. It nearly compares to traces of life. When we emerge as a newborn, we are cute and sweet and a clean slate. It then takes a lifetime to shape us, to give us the depth, wrinkles, character, understanding, Sachs explains.
The dark, damp rooms of the basement (schler) are transformed into an atmospheric, dreamy environment. Separated from their original, practical function, everyday farming objects such as milk cans and buckets are transformed into sculptures and therefore given a new poetic dimension. By perforating their surface and lighting them from inside, the artist highlights their importance and beauty. Once again, the viewers experience is multisensorial.
Sachs has always been inspired by his upbringing in Switzerland and has regularly referred to it in his sculptural practice. The neon installation Ewiger Lauf [Perpetual Run] (2016), placed on Stalla Madulains façade, recalls the memories of hearing rainwater falling down the gutter, its noise here replaced by a silent neon strip. In the field facing the barn, a 5.50 meter wooden pyramid entitled Boundless (2023) recalls the archaic architectural language used to build simple mountain structures but rendered in this case infinite.
The exhibition encompasses Sachs visual language in its entirety. All three floors attest to the artists oneiric sensibility, enduring fascination with materiality, interest in recontextualising domestic objects and to his empathetic and sensual approach to art.