Latest James Turrell
Europe's largest art work by the artist in Hanover

A Sky Space’ is planned for the Sprengel Museum's sculpture garden - a work by Jameses Turrell developed especially for this outdoor space. Turrell, known for his fascinating installations that use light as a central medium, is thus complementing the museum's existing collection, which already has one of the most extensive Turrell art ensembles in Germany. With his installation ‘Totus intus, totus foris’, the artist will transform the museum courtyard into a total work of art by 2026, integrating the other sculptures and the architectural landscape into an immersive landscape of light.


The central architectural gesture - a filigree flat roof resting on light supports that seems to float, is carried by the light and covers the entire courtyard - adds a spiritual volume of light to the existing architecture: an open, free space filled with coloured light. The eight supports of the roof are connected to each other by a ring fitted with LED light sources. These illuminate the underside of the roof in a complex programmed colour sequence, from where the light reflects downwards and transforms the courtyard into a large body of light and colour.

Dr Christiane Hackerodt explains her commitment to this artistic project: "We have a primal relationship with light. James Turrell wants to make this direct power and connection tangible in his works. With my foundation, I am looking for positions in contemporary art that inspire contemplation and meditation. Art that goes beyond the everyday and directly touches the soul. What could be more fitting than promoting James Turrell in the sculpture garden?"

 

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With the exhibition entitled A World of Dew, And Within Every Dewdrop A World of Struggle Kestner Gesellschaft is thrilled to present a fine selection of traditional Japanese scroll paintings from the period spanning across the last five centuries. The art works belong to the collection of Dr. Christiane Hackerodt Art and Culture Foundation which, with its focus on Japanese art, aims at building up a bridge between the cultures of East and West.
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It opened over fifty years ago as a place of encounter for Italian and German culture and scholarship. But what does the German Center for Venetian Studies actually do today?
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Dr. Christiane Hackerodt, chair of the Dr. Christiane Hackerodt Arts and Culture Foundation, and Dr. Marita Liebermann, privatdozent (lecturer) and director of the German Center for Venetian Studies, successfully agreed to the extend the funding provided to the Center by the Foundation. From 2022 on, the Foundation will continue to support artists and scholars in Venice for a further five years, providing stipends for studios, work visits, and catalogue publication.