Visiting artist professor
1999 - 2000
Jochen Gerz
Born in 1940 in Berlin (Germany)
Jochen Gerz lived in Paris from 1966 to 2007, and is based today in Ireland. From 1959 to 1963 he studied Literature, Sinology and Prehistory in Cologne, Basel and London.
Gerz has been working with new media since the late 1960s. After initial performances in public space, he began to produce photo/texts, installations and videos. During this period he participated in the documenta on several occasions and exhibited in the German pavilion at the 37th Venice Biennale in 1976 (together with Joseph Beuys and Reiner Ruthenbeck). His work has been shown in numerous group and solo exhibitions and retrospectives in German, European and North American museums. Since the mid-1980s Gerz has returned to public space. His iconic counter-monuments, developed in some cases over the course of several years, have made him known beyond the art world (Hamburg's Monument against Fascism; 2146 Stones, the Invisible Monument of Saarbrücken; Le monument vivant de Biron or Coventry's Future Monument).
The general public is vital to these works, which cannot be created without its contribution
and authorship.