Moving on, Höller's exhibit also makes innovative use of the space, filling it with massive slides which people can ride. This is in line with a lot of his work, which explores large-scale interaction and physical space. Trained as a phytopathologist and agronomic entomologist, he specialized in insect communication for the first part of his career, and now works as an artist. Very cool stuff, informed by beautiful science. First we check out some of his fantastic past works, then we ride the slide, okay?
Upside Down Mushroom Room, 2000
Pink Sphere, 2001
on left:THE PLANT THAT IS BORED AND WANTS TO SEE MORE OF THE WORLD AROUND, 1994; on right: PLANT SUICIDE, 1994. Both are interactive - the bored plant moves around the space, and the suicide plant gets electrocuted as it grows.
Carousel, 1999-2000
KILLING CHILDREN II, 1992
The jerry can is filled with gas; if one rides the tricycle, the match burns the wick...
And now let's S L I I I I I I I E E E E E D E !
For Carsten Höller, the experience of sliding is best summed up in a phrase by the French writer Roger Caillois as a ‘voluptuous panic upon an otherwise lucid mind’. Me likey!
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