“I have to admit that I was always happiest in my work when it took a surprising turn.”
Otto Piene
Hardly any artist has devoted himself as much to experimentation and cross-border attempts in art as Otto Piene (1928-2014). He is one of the great artistic protagonists of the 20th century. As a co-founder of the international ZERO movement, he played a decisive role in the expansion of classical art forms such as paintings and sculptures in the 1960s. His smoke and fire paintings, his light rooms and light ballets represent an almost romantic longing for harmony with nature, incorporating real movement, light, time and space into his art production. Projects in public places in Germany and America, but especially his move to the USA at the end of the 1960s, opened up further, decisive perspectives for his experimental attitude. Since the beginning of the 1970s, Piene, together with technical engineers, has developed numerous interdisciplinary projects and events at the Center for Advanced Visual Studies (CAVS, MIT, Boston) that took place in public spaces and were highly process-oriented and ephemeral. It is precisely in these ephemeral projects by the artist that an open conception of art is revealed that is still impressive today and relevant to current discourse.
With three projects in the coming summer of 2014, the Nationalgalerie Berlin and the Deutsche Bank KunstHalle would like to draw attention to this experimental attitude of Otto Piene. The focus is on artistic approaches from the 1960s and early 1970s.