Take Me (I'm Yours)

© Yoko Ono | Yoko Ono, Wish Tree, 1996, installation view at Anderson Gallery, Richmond, Virginia, 1996

 

From 31 Ottobre 2017 to 14 Gennaio 2018

Milan

Place: Pirelli HangarBicocca

Address: via Chiese 2

Times: Monday to Wednesday: closed Thursday to Sunday: 10 am-10 pm

Responsibles: Christian Boltanski, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Chiara Parisi, Roberta Tenconi

Ticket price: Admission to the show is free as always, but to take and collect the works visitors must purchase the bag designed by artist Christian Boltanski. It is for sale at the Info Point and Bookshop for 10 euros. The proceeds will help offset the expense of the works handed out in the exhibition

Telefono per informazioni: +39 02 66 11 15 73

E-Mail info: info@hangarbicocca.org

Official site: http://www.hangarbicocca.org



With Aaajiao, Etel Adnan, Rosa Aiello, Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Micol Assaël, Gianfranco Baruchello, Christian Boltanski, Mohamed Bourouissa, James Lee Byars, Luis Camnitzer, Maurizio Cattelan, Ian Cheng and Rachel Rose, Heman Chong, Jeremy Deller, Patrizio Di Massimo, Simone Fattal, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Yona Friedman, Martino Gamper, Mario García Torres, Alberto Garutti, Gilbert & George, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Félix González-Torres, Douglas Gordon, Carsten Höller, Jonathan Horowitz, David Horvitz, Adelita Husni-Bey, Pierre Huyghe, Alex Israel, Koo Jeong A, Alison Knowles, Ugo La Pietra, Armin Linke, Angelika Markul, Annette Messager, Gustav Metzger, Bruce Nauman, Otobong Nkanga, Yoko Ono, Luigi Ontani, Sarah Ortmeyer and Friederike Mayröcker, Riccardo Paratore, Sondra Perry, Cesare Pietroiusti, point d’ironie, Ho Rui An, Anri Sala, Tino Sehgal, Daniel Spoerri, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Franco Vaccari, Francesco Vezzoli and Lawrence Weiner
“Take Me (I’m Yours)” is a group exhibition that rewrites the rulebook for experiencing a work of art. Visitors to the show are invited to flout convention and do all the things they aren’t normally allowed to do in a museum: the works can be touched, used, or changed; they can be consumed or worn; purchased and even taken free of charge, or carried off in exchange for some personal item.
The exhibition is also a project that continues to evolve and be transformed. At “Take Me (I’m Yours),” the public can not only take home one of the thousands of copies of each work—helping to physically empty out the space—but alter the appearance of the show by taking part in performances where the interaction may involve an experience rather than an object, in keeping with the notion of immateriality that increasingly pervades both art and everyday life.
Presented for the first time in 1995 at the Serpentine Gallery in London—and in varying iterations in Paris, Copenhagen, New York and Buenos Aires from 2015 on—the exhibition grew out of a series of conversations between curator Hans Ulrich Obrist and artist Christian Boltanski about the need to rethink how artworks are shown. Specifically, the project concept began with Quai de la Gare (1991), a Boltanski piece made up of piles of used clothing that visitors could pick out and carry off in a bag printed with the word “Dispersion”: a work innately destined to scatter and vanish.
In Milan, alongside Christian Boltanski’s Dispersion, the works of over fifty artists will be installed in the thousand-square-meter Shed at Pirelli HangarBicocca, also popping up outside the exhibition space with projects for the catalogue, bookshop, and web. “Take Me (I’m Yours)” therefore becomes a vast arena for imagining a more direct, engaging way to experience art, where the idea of giving and receiving helps us look at the broader social and historical picture of our time in a different light.

Opening Tuesday 31 October 2017, 7 pm
On weekends, due to peaks in attendance, visitors must book their spot to enter “Take Me (I’m Yours)” (reservations online or directly at the venue, 70 people admitted every 30 minutes).
The last group will be admitted at 9.15 pm.

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