Concrete Sculptures Emerge from Iconic Barcelona Pavilion Pond in New Art Installation
Sayart
sayart2022@gmail.com | 2025-09-19 03:48:10
The renowned Mies van der Rohe Pavilion in Barcelona is hosting an innovative artistic intervention called "Lost Limits" that runs until October 5th, 2025. The collaborative project by Austrian visual artist and performer Anne Glassner and German sculptor Marit Wolters combines sculpture, performance art, and architecture to explore the boundaries between private life and public presence.
Wolters has created striking concrete sculptures that are uniquely crafted using water drawn directly from the pavilion's iconic pond. These sculptural works are then installed within the same pool where their material originated, creating a fascinating dialogue with the surrounding travertine surfaces. The placement of these pieces within this legendary architectural setting highlights how materials can transform when situated in a space that embodies modern architecture's ideals of precision, purity, and timelessness.
The performance aspect of "Lost Limits" features both artists wearing camouflage clothing designed to blend seamlessly with the pavilion's geometric forms. On September 18th, 2025, Glassner and Wolters enacted a series of everyday gestures including sitting, drinking, eating, lying down, and simply observing their surroundings. These ordinary, mundane activities become extraordinary when displaced from their typical domestic sphere into such an iconic public architectural space, making the familiar suddenly feel strange and thought-provoking.
The interactive nature of the installation allows visitors to become active participants in the artistic experience. As people move through the space, their movements naturally interrupt or redirect the performers' actions, creating an ever-changing dynamic between audience and art. This participatory element reinforces the artists' central proposition that architecture serves as a stage for lived human experience.
Through their intervention, Glassner and Wolters suggest that the boundaries we typically consider fixed—such as those between inside and outside, object and subject, and visible and hidden—are actually much more flexible and permeable than we might assume. This philosophical exploration challenges visitors to reconsider how they interact with both architectural spaces and artistic works.
"Lost Limits" represents a continuation of the artists' ongoing collaborative relationship, which previously included interventions at Villa Tugendhat in the Czech Republic during 2021 and 2022. That historic villa is another seminal work by Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich, demonstrating the artists' commitment to engaging with modernist architectural masterpieces and reimagining how contemporary audiences can experience these iconic spaces.
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