Pierre Huyghe, Exomind (Deep Water), 2017, in the Garden of the Allgemeine Lesegesellschaft.
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[Follow all of ARTnews’s continuously updated coverage from in and around Art Basel 2018.]
All day on Wednesday, one could find art types moving briskly around the Old Town section of Basel, south of the Rhine, holding maps in their hands and looking everywhere for street signs and landmarks. They were on the hunt for the 23 works included in Art Basel’s Parcours section, organized by Samuel Leuenberger, the director of the local Salts space, who has placed art in the area’s museums and gardens, parks and private buildings.
Some works are easier to find than others: it would be impossible to miss Georg Herold’s exuberant sculptures in the Basler Münster’s courtyards, but finding Pierre Huyghe’s sculpture of a woman whose head is teeming with a bee colony—à la his famous Documenta 13 contribution—requires trekking down a series of steps to a garden near the river, and Nedko Solakov has simply written little remarks and drawings on vitrines at Museum of Ancient Art.
A slide show of many of the works follows below, but if you are in Basel, I heartily recommend seeing Mark Manders’s piece at an old church building (he has a another in the Natural History Museum), which he has turned into one of his sui generis studios, where it seems a mysterious sculptor has been hard at work for a few days—or maybe a few millennia. It feels like a full-on museum show—it’s a real treat.
Also great: Nina Beier’s incredibly bizarre bucking-bull sculptures, accompanied by Mars bars; Jessica Stockholder’s explosively colored works affixed to architecture around the area; and Simon Denny’s pieces, versions of the board game Life, which he’s reimagined as a kind of exposé on cryptocurrency, one of which has been installed in a gaming shop with a perfect name: Fantastic Empire.
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A work by Georg Herold at the Basler Münster.
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Georg Herold, Beverly, 2011/2017, at the Basler Münster.
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Elmgreen & Dragset, Hanging Rock, 2017, at the Antikenmuseum Basel und Sammlung Ludwig.
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Detail of Antikdoodles, 2018, by Nedko Solakov, at the Antikenmuseum Basel und Sammlung Ludwig. (It’s the little face on the glass.)
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Detail of Antikdoodles, 2018, by Nedko Solakov, at the Antikenmuseum Basel und Sammlung Ludwig.
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Silvia Bächli & Eric Hattan, To have a shelf life (sich nicht ewig halten), 2018, at the Basler Münster.
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A work by Jessica Stockholder near the Münsterplatz.
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Across the way, another Jessica Stockholder—bright orange and radiant.
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Nina Beier, Beast, 2018, at Falkensteinerhof.
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Installation view of Mark Manders’s House with Notational Newspaper, at the Offene Kirche Elisabethan.
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Installation view of Mark Manders’s House with Notational Newspaper, at the Offene Kirche Elisabethan.
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Installation view of Mark Manders’s House with Notational Newspaper, at the Offene Kirche Elisabethan.
ANDREW RUSSETH/ARTNEWS
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A work by Marina Pinsky on view at the Historisches Museum Basel, Haus zum Kirschgarten.
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Hilary Lloyd, Robot, 2015, at the Theater Basel.
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Partial view of a work by Simon Denny at the Historisches Museum Basel.
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A work by Simon Starling at the gaming store Fantastic Empire.
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Paloma Varga Weisz, Bois Dormant – Cabinet, 2015, at the Historiches Museum Basel, Gartenpavillon, Haus zum Kirschgarten.
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Partial installation view of Caroline Mesquita’s contribution to Parcours, on view at the Historisches Museum Basel.
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Installation view of Mark Manders’s Room with Three Dead Birds and Falling Dictionaries, 1993–2018, at the Naturhistorisches Museum Basel.
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A meticulous reproduction of a shelf of books by Simon Starling, on view at the Museum der Kulturen Basel.
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