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CONTEXTS

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Heidi Bucher

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Heidi Bucher's work is characterised first and foremost by a compulsion to preserve and memorialise the traces of human histories, often her own, in architectural spaces. The artist’s häutungen or “skinnings”, are made by applying layer upon layer of latex paint mixed with gauze, textiles, mother of pearl and other materials onto the surfaces of walls, doors, and other architectural features. Peeling back the resulting fragile carapaces, reveals an ephemeral “memory of the architecture’s body in a fleshy husk” (Bucher & Ardalan, 2018., p.15).

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Bellevue (kleines Glasportal), Bellevue Kreuzlingen (Small glass portal, Bellevue Kreuzlingen), 1988, Cast Latex and Gauze, 340 x 465 cm.

This idea of taking an imprint of the skin of the world is something that Bucher and my work have a similar interest in exploring. She talks about how she “must come closer to everything” and needs to “touch” and “observe” the world around her (Ibid., p.15). These “three-dimensional frottage” skins (Ibid., p.39), touch on a great deal of themes such as memory, loss, the weight of the past, transformation, release and feminist liberation.  

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Fliegender Hautraum (Flying Skinroom), 1981, Approx 269 ft. Height approx. 280 cm, Installation view from the Ahnenhaus/Obermühle Winterthur, Photograph by Andreas Schwarber, Courtesy the Estate of Heidi Bucher

I was particularly fascinated by this idea that Bucher considered spaces to be like “shells”, much like bodies, and she considered things both “physical and metaphysical” to all be spaces of a sort, defined by their “external structure” (Ibid., p. 7-13). This is something I wish to research more in the future. Furthermore, much like my own work, her “skinnings” are very concerned with transience and the febrility of lived existence and this is emphasised by their delicate, light and translucent materiality. I am also inspired by the mother of pearl she uses in her latex frottages as the pigment create a kind of shininess that is another feature of my own work. 

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Film by Michael Koechlin of Heidi Bucher Skinning the Bellevue, Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, 16mm SWF3, Duration: 8 min 57 sec.

The physicality inherent in cutting away the gauze and latex from its holdings, is a highly developed form of performative art. This is something that I wish to think about more in terms of how I approach my rubbings and the performative element, which is quite often inherent in their making. In her Herrenzimmer (gentleman’ study) piece, the physical act of tugging away and peeling off the latex from the study, a room traditionally associated within the sphere of men and male discourse to the exclusion of women, is a powerful representation of shedding the skin of the patriarchy and liberating herself from it (Bucher & Ardalan, 2018., p.63). This process can be imagined from the video above, showing it in action, in a later work (Bucher & Koechlin). 

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(Left) 'Frottage' St. Paul de Vence, 1979, Linseed Oil, Graphite, Mother of Pearl on Bütten Paper 120 x 80 cm Frottage (textile-Rubbings), 1979, 120 x 80 cm Lindseed Oil, Graphite and (Right) Mother of Pearl Pigment on Paper, Collection MoMA, Museum of Modern Art, New York

This feminist agenda can also be seen by the process being used to preserve traces of female clothing. The artist “turned outerwear into a form of embalmment”. Much like the dilapidated houses or institutions in which she made her work, they were also “a shell” that are representational of a hollow space (Ibid., p.40). The many questions that form concerning her work, ranging from the dichotomy of whether her shells are protective or imprisoning, escapism or introspection, the past or a look to the future are multi-layered and rich with deeper meaning. Although my work is much more to do with touch, value and even more concerned with surface texture than even her latex allows for, these deep multifaceted layers of intentionality and thought is what I want for the future direction of my work. 

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FDer Parkettboden Des Herrenzimmer, 1979, 500 x 424 cm Winterthur, Wülfingen, in 46 pieces. Trunk 56 x 75 x 56 cm. Exhibition view, Swiss institut CCS, 2013, Paris.

 A final series of points to make on her practice is the sheer boldness and scale of her work which I feel can allow me to go larger and in a more sculptural direction with my own work. She would hang her works from the walls or even the ceiling and this is a very interesting approach to presentation. It was likewise very helpful during my research into her art practice to come across the works of other artists working with architectural space, such as Robert Overby, Michael Asher, Lawerence Weiner and Gordon Matta Clarks who I plan to research further.

References

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Bucher, H., & Ardalan, Z. (2018). Heidi Bucher. Parasol unit.  

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Bellevue, Kreuzlingen. Bucher, H. and Koechlin, M. (Directors). ().[Video/DVD] 

© 2022 By Tom Harper

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