Lutz Bacher

A black bus.
A black bus.

Lutz Bacher, Bus, 2011. Digital photograph, dimensions variable. Image courtesy the artist, Ratio 3, San Francisco, Alex Zachary, New York, and Cabinet, London. Photograph by Vincent Fecteau

Born in the United States
Lives and Works in Berkeley

To create her work for the 2012 Biennial, Pipe Organ, Lutz Bacher has fitted an old Yamaha organ with corroded, discolored organ pipes and rigged it with bamboo “fingers.” The organ and pipes, controlled by a computer program, give voice to a random sequence of sudden sounds and pronounced silences that provide an unexpected rhythm to the exhibition. Bacher’s intervention adds new meaning to the organ’s already rich connotations. Here, associations of religious piety intersect with suggestions of destruction and the beautiful, perplexingly otherworldly tones themselves, evoking much yet deftly resisting clear articulation.

The framed pages that make up Bacher’s The Celestial Handbook were taken from found copies of a mid-century astronomy handbook. Each page ostensibly describes the unimaginable vastness of space, but the photographs and captions fall far short of the immense task. By disrupting the order of the book and scattering pages throughout the Museum, she further unsettles the already unsteady relationship between text and image.

Like much of Bacher’s practice, these works, as well as those on view on the fourth floor May 23–June 3, use readymades in unexpected ways to pose questions—but those questions remain inscrutable, and no answers are offered.

On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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