Centre for International Light Art (CILA)
Zentrum für Internationale Lichtkunst
Illuminated Fibonacci numbers at the chimney of the former Linden brewery, now the location of the museum.
The CILA's landmark: installation of Fibonacci numbers by Mario Merz
CILA is located in Germany
CILA
CILA
Location of the Centre for International Light Art in Germany
Established2002 (2002)
LocationLindenplatz 1, 59423 Unna, Germany
Coordinates51°32′04″N 7°41′08″E / 51.534569°N 7.685521°E / 51.534569; 7.685521
TypeArt museum
Key holdingsJames Turrell, Keith Sonnier, Mario Merz
CollectionsLight art
DirectorJohn Jaspers
Public transit accessBus: Lindenplatz
Nearest car parkAdjacent to the building
Websitewww.lichtkunst-unna.de

The Centre for International Light Art (CILA, German: Zentrum für Internationale Lichtkunst) is an art museum in Unna, Germany. It is the world's only museum which is exclusively dedicated to the collection and presentation of light art.

Collection and exhibitions

Centre for International Light Art

The museum's permanent exhibition shows works by twelve internationally renowned light artists: James Turrell, Keith Sonnier, Mario Merz, Joseph Kosuth, Mischa Kuball, Rebecca Horn, Christina Kubisch, Jan van Munster, François Morellet, Christian Boltanski, Brigitte Kowanz and Olafur Eliasson.

Since 2009, the artwork Third Breath, 2005 by American light artist James Turrell is part of the permanent exhibition. It is a camera obscura, consisting of two rooms. In the lower, cubic room (Camera Obscura Space), the visitor sees an image of the sky which is being reflected through a lens on the ground. In the upper, cylindrical room (Sky Space), the sky can be seen directly through a hole in the ceiling. The opening of the artwork was accompanied by the four-month exhibition James Turrell - Geometry of Light.

The current temporary exhibition MORELLET shows the last exhibition of works by François Morellet which has been curated by the artist himself, shortly before his death in May 2016.[1] In 2014, the temporary exhibition was Jan van Munster - L ich T (2014). The temporary exhibition ¡DARK! + Dark II (two, too) in 2015/2016 showed works by Anthony McCall, Diana Ramaekers, Regine Schumann, Vera Röhm, and Lucinda Devlin.

In addition to the permanent and temporary exhibitions, the center organizes conferences, symposia and workshops, and serves as a forum for discussions. The CILA is a major part of the regional cultural project Hellweg - Ein Lichtweg (Hellweg - A Way of Light), which links light art projects along the historical Westphalian Hellweg travel route. Within a distance of only a few miles around the CILA, works by Rosemarie Trockel, Kazuo Katase, Michael Batz, Claudia Wissmann, and Jan Philip Scheibe are shown.

Architecture

The CILA is located at the heart of the city of Unna, in the former Linden brewery, a red brick industrial building complex dating from the 19th century. Its landmark is an installation of Fibonacci numbers by Italian artist Mario Merz. The light art installations are integrated into the industrial structures of the brewery's former cellar vaults.

Selected exhibitions

  • 2016/2017: MORELLET, a retrospective of works by François Morellet.
  • 2016: Switch with Marion Cziba, Raika Dittmann, Martin Fell, Nicole Fleisch, Karen Fritz, Daniel Hausig, Ida Kammerloch, Octavian Mariutiu, Maria Elena Schmidt, Michael Voigt, and Ingo Wendt[2]
  • 2015/2016: Dark with Anthony McCall, Diana Ramaekers, Regine Schumann, Vera Röhm, and Lucinda Devlin[3]
  • 2013: Words Don't Come Easily with Boris Petrovsky, Tsang Kin-Wah, Raqs Media Collective, and Jason Rhoades[4]

References

  1. Centre for International Light Art, Exhibition info MORELLET (24.09.2016-29.01.2017)
  2. Centre for International Light Art, Exhibition info SWITCH HBKsaar (10.06.-10.07.2016) Archived 2016-07-06 at the Wayback Machine, July 6, 2016
  3. Centre for International Light Art, Exhibition info ¡DARK! + Dark II (two, too) (26.09.2015-03.04.2016), July 6, 2016
  4. Centre for International Light Art, Exhibition info Words Don't Come Easily... (14.09.2013-16.03.2014), July 6, 2016
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