Monica Studer, Christoph van den Berg: Rockfall, 2007
Heliogravure, aquatint on paper, Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur buendner-kustmuseum.ch
Markus Schwander: Flims Studies, 2012, wall collages
Andreas Renatus Högger (1808-1854), Rockslide at Felsberg, 1843-45, watercolour and pen, Kunstmuseum St. Gallen buendner-kustmuseum.ch
Mathias Balzer (1932-2012): Stone landscape (5 parts), 2000 / 2001
Dry point etchings on Zerkall handmade paper, Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Gereon Lepper (*1956): Call of the mountains, 1999
Steel, stones, motor buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Andreas Renatus Högger (1808-1854): Rockslide at Felsberg. The first three landslides of 11 October 1844, observed from below, 1844
Pen and watercolour on paper, Kunstmuseum St. Gallen buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Roman Signer: Rockfall in bottle store, 2012
Wood, bottles, stone buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Markus Schwander: Flims Studies, 2012,
Collages buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Mark Boyle (1934-2005), Joan Hills (*1931): Swiss series I: Study of elemental forces, 1978/79
Museum of Art, Lucerne buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
Markus Schwander: Nr 77 The Frank Slide Show 2008-2012
Print on photographic paper buendner-kunstmuseum.ch
In the biggest ever landslide in the Alps nearly 10,000 years ago, more than nine cubic kilometers of rock slid down the mountainside in canton Graubünden. A new exhibition entitled Rockslide as Preparation, Conserved Motion at the Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur (Graubünden Art Museum), shows artists' attempts to depict the event.
This content was published on August 31, 2012 minutes
The exhibition is linked to a project of the same name at the Bern University of the Arts backed by the Swiss National Science Fund. The word “preparation” is used in the sense of an object prepared and conserved for museum display. A research team and 16 artists tackle the problem of enabling viewers to see and experience the rockslide. Debris from the slide buried the area between Ilanz and Domat/Ems, a distance of about 20 kilometres. The Rhine now flows through it, carving out the spectacular Rhine gorge. (Photos: Bündner Kunstmuseum)
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