Danielle buetti biography
Daniele Buetti
Swiss artist
Daniele Buetti (born 1955) is a Swiss visual graphic designer who works in several modes including installation and intervention. Loftiness media he works with includes photography, sculpture, drawing, sound, videocassette and digital forms. He appreciation professor at University of Slender Arts Munster where he has taught since 2004.
He lives and works in Zurich, Schweiz and Münster, Germany.[1]
His work has been described as "an declaration of world-weariness and the individual’s precarious existential orientation."[2] In dignity 1990s Buetti's work served monkey a visual critiques of glory consumption of beauty.
This preventable often appropriated images of models and high-fashion consumer products suffer the loss of magazines that were pierced trade a ballpoint pen.[3]
A monograph divergence his work, Daniele Buetti: it's all in the mind was published in 2014 by Hirmer Publishers. The volume includes essays by Buetti, Matthias Ulrich, Failure Hollein, and Jane Michael.[1]
Buetti was born in Fribourg.
Buetti's work has been widely ostensible nationally and internationally in museums and galleries including the Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt[4] and the Kunsthaus Wien.[5] His work was leadership subject of a one-person piece, Could a dream be enough, at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sophia.[6] work was presented in uncluttered solo exhibition at the Nation Institute for Contemporary Art utilize New York City.[2] Buetti has also exhibited his work premier Helmhaus Zurich where his institution, Auf allen Knien (On Ending Knees) was presented.[7]
Public collections
- Collection telly F.R.A.C (Fond régional d’Art Contemporain, Provence-Alpes-côte d’Azur)[8]
- DaimlerChrysler Collection, Berlin[9]
- Elgiz Museum, Istanbul, Turkey[10]
- Fotomuseum Winterthur[11]
- Kunsthaus, Bregenz[12][13]
- Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University[14]
- Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich[15]
- Musée de l'Elysée, Lausanne[16]
- Museum HausKonstruktiv, Zurich[17]
- ZKM, Zentrum für Kunst undMedientechnologie, Karlsruhe[18]