Exhibition
long last happy

Ugo Rondinone
08
.
Feb
.
2025
27
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Apr
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2025

long last happy is an exhibition by Swiss contemporary artist Ugo Rondinone built upon the principles of three celestial forces from the natural world: the sun, the moon, and the rainbow.

long last happy es una exposición del artista contemporáneo suizo Ugo Rondinone. Esta exposición inmersiva invita a los visitantes a un mundo luminoso inspirado en tres fuerzas celestiales del mundo natural: el sol, la luna y el arcoíris. A través de esculturas monumentales, que miden aproximadamente 5 metros de altura, y un proyecto de participación pública realizado por medio de una activación con 1600 niños de diversos orígenes, Rondinone explora el mundo natural y nos lleva a una reflexión sobre la espiritualidad humana: el consuelo y la regeneración.

Con long last happy, Rondinone nos invita a contemplar las intersecciones de la vida, la muerte, la luz y la oscuridad, al tiempo que ofrece un mensaje de esperanza y alegría. La exposición ofrece un espacio de consuelo y reflexión, basándose en el recorrido personal del artista y su creencia en el significado espiritual del mundo natural.

La colaboración interdisciplinaria con varios artistas contemporáneos y los programas públicos de Arte Abierto han permitido que este tipo de obras puedan presentarse en México, generando una vez más una experiencia inmersiva en la que nuestro público explora lenguajes comunes a través de un arte que conecta de forma natural e intuitiva. Una vez más, mostramos cómo nuestros artistas y el público, sin ningún tipo de intermediario, logran conectar sus emociones desde contextos muy distintos.

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Texto
long last happy
Por
Ugo Rondinone
long last happy
Por

The natural world has held a place of great importance for my artistic practice across several decades. During the AIDS crisis in 1989 and after my partner Manfred Welser died of AIDS-related illness, I turned away from grief and found in nature a spiritual roadmap for solace, regeneration, and inspiration. In nature, you enter a space where the sacred and profane, the mystical and the mundane, vibrate against one another.

The exhibition at Arte Abierto is built upon the principles of three celestial forces from the natural world: the sun, the moon, and the rainbow.

the sun and the moon (2022), are formed with delicate circles fashioned from cast-bronze tree branches, one gilded and the other silver leaved. The twin sculptures are both over sixteen feet tall. Installed parallel to one another, the sun and the moon are aligned along an east-west axis of the Arte Abierto gallery, resembling portals or apertures.

Like the cycle of day and night, these two archetypes represent contradictory, codependent, and complementary values. We can think of the sun and the moon as our metaphorical eyes. When the two principles marry, visions become binocular; that is; two visionary bodies of being integrate into one mysterious whole. Based on each one’s unique vision, the sun and the moon bring in different information that contributes to the vision guiding this exhibition and our own wild life.

These two sculptures are accompanied by two interactive artworks: your age and my age and the age of the sun (2013–ongoing) and your age and my age and the age of the moon (2020–ongoing). The visitors will find, behind a magic door, two rooms filled with thousands of images of the sun and the moon painted by children from all over Mexico. When I visited the space of Arte Abierto, I determined that public engagement would be one of the key aspects of the exhibition.

Acknowledging the Foundation’s interest in developing country-wide networks, I asked that my project should be far-reaching. Assisted by Arte Abiertos’s Public Program department, I engaged 1,600 children from diverse backgrounds, including children with physical and developmental disabilities, and others from a range of socio-economic realities. Each child was invited to create a drawing for the installation with the promise that there would be no curatorial intervention and every sun and moon drawing produced would be presented.

Outside the exhibition space, on the rooftop, stands LONG LAST HAPPY (2020), a ten-meter-long neon, whose rainbow-striped letters spell out a poetic statement addressed to passers-by. This message of eternal bliss is timeless and unites people over millennia and continents. A rainbow is a bridge that unifies everything with everyone.

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Selección de obras
long last happy, 2020
De la serie
Rainbow poems
Neon, acrylic glass, translucent film, aluminum
+
the sun, 2022
De la serie
Golden bronze
ø 500 cm
+
the moon, 2022
De la serie
Silver-plated bronze
ø 500 cm
+
your age and my age and the age of the sun, 2013 – ongoing
De la serie
Drawings of suns made by children from Mexico
Variable dimensions
+
your age and my age and the age of the moon, 2020 — ongoing
De la serie
Cartoons of moons made by children from Mexico
Dimensiones variables
+
Recorrido por la exposición con Troika
Video
5'35''
Programa Público