Bergen Kunsthall

Oscar Tuazon

Water School

27 Jan - 09 Apr 2023

Los Angeles Water School, 2023, Installation view. One of four parts, variable dimensions Cardboard, wood, tape Courtesy of the artist, STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo, and Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris.
Liquid Words, 2023, detail view. Tree, pipe, water pump, bassin. Height: approx. 400 cm Courtesy of the artist and STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo
Liquid Words, 2023, detail view. Tree, pipe, water pump, bassin. Height: approx. 400 cm Courtesy of the artist and STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo
Liquid Words, 2023, Installation view. Tree, pipe, water pump, bassin. Height: approx. 400 cm Courtesy of the artist and STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo
Oscar Tuazon, Great Lakes Water School, 2023, installation view. One of four parts, variable dimensions Cardboard, wood, tape
Lawrence “Ulaaq” Ahvakana: Twin Souls (Day and Night/Eclipse) Mask in Female Form, 2019, installation view. Yellow cedar, red cedar, oak nose piece, Ivory chin ornament and molted parrot feathers Courtesy of the artist.
Oscar Tuazon, Wet Slab, 2009, installation view. Mixed media; steel, broken security glass, rubber cutting mat, plastic, steel, mesh, plexiglass, fibreglass 125,5 x 72,5 x 24,4 cm. Eivind Aadland Collection
Oscar Tuazon, Owens Valley Water War, 2019, installation view. Watercolour paint and colour pencil on original letter (approximately 1862) sheets of mirror and glass metal brackets 40 panels, each 37 × 28 cm. Courtesy of the artist and STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo
Oscar Tuazon, Owens Valley Water War, 2019, installation view. Watercolour paint and colour pencil on original letter (approximately 1862) sheets of mirror and glass metal brackets 40 panels, each 37 × 28 cm. Courtesy of the artist and STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo
Oscar Tuazon, Los Angeles Water School, 2023, Installation view. One of four parts, variable dimensions Cardboard, wood, tape Courtesy of the artist, STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo, and Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris.
Bergen Kunsthall presents a large-scale exhi­bition with new works by the American artist Oscar Tuazon. Tuazon (b. 1975 in Seattle, WA) is known predominantly for his sculptural work, but his practice also expands towards architecture and activism. His work often uses architectural techniques and materials, producing quasi-functional objects, parts or representations of spaces, or constructions that are open to use and appropriation. His well-known fireplace sculptures, for example, shown often in public sites, provide a space for collective gatherings. Many of his projects are inspired by alternative and utopian archi­tectures of the 1960 and 1970s, do-it-yourself buildings and early eco-efficient and self-sus­tainable living models. Tuazon explores these architectural approaches to test their poten­tial for today, not only in terms of the under­lying technological principles but also alternative uses of space and models of sub­jectivity they propose.

The exhibition at Bergen Kunsthall presents new works and a large-scale installation connected to Tuazon’s ongoing project
“Water School”. With this project, starting in 2016, Tuazon and collaborators explore the dynamics and power plays that regulate access to land, water, and infrastructures. In 2018, Tuazon founded the Los Angeles Water School (LAWS) as an educational centre focus­ing on water as the connective tissue between people and their surroundings. Since then, it has also opened in other loca­tions through exhibitions and social work. The physical structure of the “Water School” is based on a design for a “Zome House” (1969-1972) by the architects and engineers Holly and Steve Baer, an early radical design based on the use of passive solar energy. As the artist explains the project, “Water School moves, following water as it cycles across vast geographies, linking mountains to oceans and subterranean aquifers to the skies above them. Water School is a mobile architecture, learning from the fluidity of its medium and the collab­orative process of its construction.”

For his exhibition at Bergen Kunsthall, Oscar Tuazon presents a scaled-down version of the initial “Water School” pavilions. The structure will occupy all four main gallery spaces of the Kunsthall and create a series of rooms in which inside and outside blurs. Additional works will create useable situations, provide reading materials, and document previous iterations of the “Water School”. Further works explore the artistic imagination of water. An ensemble of powder-printed windows echoes the architec­ture of the “Water School” physical structure, containing additional image material, like drawings or paintings. In the centre of the exhibition, a new fountain sculpture will bring water, its materiality, and the sounds we con­nect with it directly into the exhibition. The show will also include a series of works by Larry “Ulaaq” Ahvakana, a Native Alaskan artist and early mentor of Tuazon.

Curated by Axel Wieder.
 

Tags: Oscar Tuazon, Axel John Wieder