This winter the main space of the Swiss Institute –
Contemporary Art will feature a new work by Momoyo Torimitsu:
a meditation on the world of global commerce. A landscaped
diorama of the international business world will sprawl
across the floor, inviting visitors to view and participate
as giant judges of a maze of commerce-competition.
New York-based Japanese artist, Momoyo Torimitsu will transform
the main gallery into a network of geographic territories,
over which an army of mini-businessmen, the size of ‘GI
Joe’ toys, will crawl, racing against each other,
across imagined borders. Throughout diverse terrains, over
hundreds of countries, Torimitsu’s project will evoke
not only the competition, but the vast system of commerce
that crosses boundaries, both political and physical. As
they inch forward, like soldiers on a battlefield, the businessmen
become corporate combatants, chasing each other, creeping
over seas to occupy each other's economies.
Torimitsu first created a life-size Japanese businessman,
a robot she called Miyata Jiro, (pictured above), in 1994,
which she brought to business capitals across the globe.
More recently, she has conceived of the possibility of racing
multiple businessman robots of different nationalities;
she presents this new work at Deitch Projects this winter.
The paring down in size for her project at the SI reflects
her wish to demean and belittle the competition of the global
business world. She imagines an ant-like swarm of toy businessman-soldiers
for the SI, where the visitors become giant observers, allowing
the audience to take a step outside the competition, and
act as observers, assistants, fans or judges.
L.A.-based Japanese artist, Kaz Oshiro will present a work
for the lounge, contributing to the SI’s exploration
of the possibilities for painting after the end of painting,
which will culminate with next year’s Last Painting
show, to be curated by Olivier Mosset. Oshiro uses his painted
canvases as building blocks for trompe l’oeil sculptures.
But unlike Swiss tricksters Fischli & Weiss, Oshiro
reveals his method openly, making for the unusual combination
of earnestness and appropriation.
The
library will feature the work of Italian artist, Lara Favaretto,
who attempts to recreate small details of the best party
you never went to. The lobby box features the current Swiss
artist-in-residence at PS1, San Keller, who invites you
to let him walk you home.