glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
Briefly

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
"Presented by the Luma Foundation in Engadin, Switzerland, as part of Elevation 1049, STRIP TOWER (962) brings Gerhard Richter's long-running investigations into the Alpine landscape, extending his practice beyond the canvas and into three-dimensional space. On view until the spring of 2029, the work draws from the methodology of his Strip Paintings, where a single painted gesture is subjected to successive acts of photographing, scanning, digital slicing, and stretching."
"Rising over five meters, the sculpture, recently presented at Serpentine, London, consists of eight perpendicular panels clad in glazed ceramic tiles, each carrying vertically elongated color stripes. The intersecting panels allow people to walk between the surfaces, shifting the encounter from distant viewing to bodily experience. Light reflects off the glossy surfaces, while weather, cloud cover, snow, and seasonal shifts continuously recompose the work."
STRIP TOWER (962) is a five-meter sculpture by Gerhard Richter presented by the Luma Foundation in Engadin as part of Elevation 1049 and on view until spring 2029. The work adapts the Strip Paintings method by subjecting a single painted gesture to photographing, scanning, digital slicing, and stretching, converting analogue marks into repeated bands of color. The structure comprises eight perpendicular panels clad in glazed ceramic tiles, each bearing vertically elongated stripes and permitting viewers to walk between surfaces for bodily engagement. Placement near Lake Silvaplana embeds the work in the Alpine ecosystem, where light, moisture, temperature, and seasonal change continuously alter perception and appearance, encouraging repeated visits and slow looking.
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