Circular Gravestones in Black and White
"You Want it Darker". Until the middle of July, an exhibition at the Friedhof Forum (Cemetery Forum) in Zurich invites visitors to reflect on mortality in the form of music and art. Through music and sculpture, the exhibition is devoted to the subject of approaching death and the remembrance of someone beloved.
For over ten years, the Friedhof Forum in the offices of the Sihlfeld cemetery in Zurich has been exploring mortality, death, and remembrance in an artistic and non-denominational way once a year. Running until mid-July, the three exhibition spaces on Aemtlerstrasse will be focusing on musicians who grew up in youth culture and are now slowly starting to age and the way they are coping with this. How do ageing pop and rock musicians deal with the irreversible and therefore inevitable fact that their days are also finally numbered? How does this awareness affect their songs? Nearly 70 years after the invention of rock 'n' roll, the promise of eternal youth and unbridled lust for life proclaimed back then no longer fully holds true today.
Visualising the Invisible
Thomas Scheibitz, for example, who is from a family of traditional stonemasons, has sculpted a yellow-coloured cube. In doing so, he is referring to DĂĽrer's copperplate engraving Melancholia as well as the tune Lullaby by US singer Scott Walker.
The easiest way to do this is to listen to the songs. You will find the playlist compiled by Max Dax for the exhibition HERE.
The article was written by Willy Hafner in German.
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