Franz West: Mostly West
The first exhibition by the great Austrian artist Franz West (1947-2012) of works made in collaboration with other leading visual artists, including Mathis Esterhazy, Marina Faust, Douglas Gordon, Richard Hoeck, Sarah Lucas, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Rudolf Polanszky, Andreas Reiter Raabe, Anselm Reyle, and Heimo Zobernig. 13 July – 22 September. Tues - Sun, 10am - 5.30pm
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Mostly West encapsulates West's belief in the juxtaposition of various artistic viewpoints through collaboration and in art as a participatory activity. His hugely influential Adaptives, early sculptural works begun in 1974, were made to be held and adapted to the human body. Later works also invited participation and interaction, including furniture and his brightly-coloured aluminium sculptures which were the subject of Meeting Points, an outdoor exhibition held at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh in 2002. Throughout his life, West combined works from different periods to produce new readings, often integrating works by other artists with his own. The exhibition is curated by Ines Turian, Chair of the Franz West Foundation.
Untitled – Not Finished, 2012. Sarah Lucas and Franz West: Mostly West, Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh, 2013. Images by Michael Wolchover.
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Press Release
Mostly West: Franz West and Artist Collaborations, the first ever exhibition by the great Austrian artist Franz West (1947 – 2012) of works made solely in collaboration with other artists, including: Richard Artschwager, Jack Bauer, Joachim Baur, Reinhard Bernsteiner, Jean Marc Bustamante, Mathis Estherhazy, Marina Faust, Herbert Flois, Heiri Häfliger, Anton Herzl, Richard Hoeck, Peter Höll, Peter Gerwin Hoffmann, Douglas Gordon, Roland Kollnitz, Jannis Kounellis, Sarah Lucas, Albert Oehlen, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Raymond Pettibon, Rudolf Polanszky, Andreas Reiter Raabe, Anselm Reyle, Eugenia Rochas, Eva Schlegel, Gabi Senn, Tamuna Sirbiladze, Janc Szeniczei, Octavian Trauttmansdorff and Heimo Zobernig.
Mostly West is immersive and thrilling; the exhibition transforms Inverleith House into a series of highly distinctive rooms, each defined by the character of its collaborations. Visitors can not only look at art – but also sit, talk and play – in keeping with West’s unique and profound spirit of engagement.
West collaborated throughout his career and saw art as participatory, often integrating works by different artists with his own and combining works from various periods to produce new readings. His hugely influential Passstücke (Adaptives) begun in 1974 are amorphously shaped sculptures made to be used by the participant. His later furniture and brightly-coloured aluminum sculptures are conceived as both useable objects and installations. Mostly West features almost fifty works conceived and made by West and his collaborators throughout a thirty year period, from 1982 to the present day; the artist passed away on 25 July 2012.
Hugely influential in his own right, West was actively interested in the work of other artists and would often invite collaborations. Sometimes (as in the case of the earliest works in the exhibition, made with Eugenia Rochas in 1983), West would give an artist a work of his own to ‘complete’. On other occasions, the collaboration began by West asking another artist to provide something of their own; the Spiegel in Kabine mit Passtücken (1996) began by West asking Michelangelo Pistoletto for a mirror. In West’s extensive and most recent collaboration – with Anselm Reyle, works would be sent back and forth between the artists; first exhibited at the Shinkel Pavilion in Berlin last year, these are displayed in the first room of the exhibition.
Whilst the identities of both artists are expressed (and respected) in such collaborations, West was the instigator and – it seems, had ‘the final say’. West was also interested in performance and music; he worked with the Bulgarian choreographer and performer Ivo Dimchev (with West’s ‘Adaptives’) and the Austrian musician Philipp Quehenberger – whose contribution to Mostly West plays quietly in the pond outside Inverleith House. West’s magical collaboration with Heimo Zobernig, Bateau Imaginaire can be seen by visiting the pond in the Chinese Hillside to the south of Inverleith House.
The Garden was one of the first public institutions to exhibit West’s aluminum sculptures in an outdoor exhibition, Meeting Points (2001) and Mostly West was conceived in 2011, the year West received the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement at the 54th Venice Biennale. Mostly West is curated by Ines Turian, chair of the Franz West Foundation, and is kindly supported by The Austrian Consulate and Gagosian Gallery.
Inverleith House is a Partner Gallery of the 2013 Edinburgh Art Festival.
The Garden was one of the first public institutions to exhibit West’s aluminum sculptures in an outdoor exhibition, Meeting Points, (2001) and Mostly West was conceived in 2011, the year West received the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement at the 54th Venice Biennale. Mostly West is curated by Ines Turian, chair of the Franz West Foundation, and is kindly supported by The Austrian Consulate and Gagosian Gallery. Inverleith House is a Partner Gallery of the 2013 Edinburgh Art Festival.
The Garden was one of the first public institutions to exhibit West’s aluminum sculptures in an outdoor exhibition, Meeting Points, (2001) and Mostly West was conceived in 2011, the year West received the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement at the 54th Venice Biennale. Mostly West is curated by Ines Turian, chair of the Franz West Foundation, and is kindly supported by The Austrian Consulate and Gagosian Gallery. Inverleith House is a Partner Gallery of the 2013 Edinburgh Art Festival.
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Artist Biography
Franz West was born in Vienna in 1947 and studied at the Academy of Applied Arts, Vienna. He died in Vienna in July 2012. West's work has featured prominently in numerous international survey exhibitions such as Documenta and in Biennales all over the world. It is included in major public collections including the Centre Pompidou, Paris; Museum Ludwig, Cologne, the Museum of Modern Art, New York; and MAXXI, Rome. Recent solo exhibitions include ‘We’ll Not Carry Coals’, Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria (2003); ‘Recent Sculptures’, Lincoln Centre, New York (2004); Vancouver Art Gallery (2005); MAK, Vienna (2008); ‘To Build A House You Start with the Roof: Work, 1972–2008’, Baltimore Museum of Art (2008–09, travelled to Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2009); and ‘Franz West: Autotheatre’, Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2010, travelled to MADRE, Naples and Universalmuseum, Graz, Austria in 2010–11).
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Events Programme
Exhibition Talk with Lisa Le Feuvre (Henry Moore Institute) 1 August 14:00-15:00 2013
Exhibition Talk with Dominic Paterson Saturday 17 August, 14:00 - 15:00
Festival Detours: Louise Ahl (Ultimate Dancer) 24 August 2013
Performance views, Louise Ahl (Ultimate Dancer) in Franz West: Mostly West, Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 2013. Images by Kat Gollock, courtesy of Louise Ahl, Edinburgh Art Festival Detours and Inverleith House.
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Discover more
- Past Exhibitions - 2016
- 2015 - Keyser
- 2015 - Party
- 2015 - Copestake
- 2014 - Dordoy
- 2014 - Sworn
- 2014 - Genzken
- 2014 - Conrad
- 2013 - Roberts
- 2013 - Colen
- 2013 - Phillips
- 2012 - Fowler
- 2012 - McKeown
- 2012 - Guston
- 2012 - Hope
- 2011 - Cahun
- 2011 - Houseago
- 2011 - Rauschenberg
- 2010 - Morton
- 2010 - Fecteau
- 2010 - Mitchell
- 2010 - Chaimowicz
- 2009 - Tompkins
- 2009 - Evans
- 2009 - McCracken
- 2009 - Karla Black
- 2008 - Swain
- 2008 - Evans
- 2008 - Bourgeois
- 2008 - Balfour
- 2008 - Hamilton
- 2007 - Teller
- 2007 - Snelling
- 2007 - Miller
- 2007 - Eggleston
- 2007 - Smith/Stewart
- 2006 - Horn
- 2006 - Stingel
- 2006 - Rungiah and Govindoo
- 2006 - Ryman
- 2006 - Gordon
- 2005 - Collishaw
- 2005 - Evergreen
- 2005 - Finlay
- 2005 - Leckey
- 2005 - Farquhar
- 2004 - Therrien
- 2003 - Lambie
- 2003 - Warhol
- 2003 - Rough
- 2003 - Periton
- 2003 - Schnabel
- 2002 - Meene
- 2002 - Vollmer
- 2002 - Wilkes
- 2002 - Dapuri
- 2002 - Charlton
- 2002 - Twombly
- 2001 - Kubrick
- 2001 - McKenzie/Olowska
- 2001 - Ruckheim
- 2001 - West
- 2001 - Ruscha
- 2001 - Ross-Craig
- 2001 - Henderson
- 2000 - British Art Show 5
- 2000 - Balfour
- 2000 - Owens
- 2000 - Bloomberg New Contemporaries
- 1998 - Tuttle
- 1998 - Stout
- 1998 - Kretschmer
- 1998 - Andre
- 1998 - Hood and Frew
- 1998 - Family
- 1996 - Innes
- 1996 - Cecilia Vicuna
- 1996 - Absolut Blue and White
- 1995 - Johnston
- 1994 - Baumgarten
- 1990 - Goldsworthy
- 2016 - British Art Show 8
- 2016 - I still believe in miracles
- 2016 - The Coat
- 2023- De Souza
- 2024 - Silent Archive
- 2021 - Borland
- 2020 - Florilegium
- 2020 - Bowen
- 2019 - Biss
- 2022 - In The Eddy of the Stream
- 2021 - Cordis Prize for Tapestry
- 2022 - Rhododendrons