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- Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist takes up the concept of the cover version, in which one performer does a version of another's song, and gives it her own twist, starting with music from Chris Isaak's hit single Wicked Game with screamed lyrics.
- In this work, the artist wears an overabundant make-up and continues to smash and rub her face into a glass window, smearing the makeup and distorting her face, giving new meaning to the term "makeup remover" with this in-your-face visual.
- Video installation projected on the ground and showing the artist in a polka dot dress strolling in an environment saturated with colors. The choice of location must be first discussed in collaboration with the artist.
- The video, commissioned by the Dallas Symphony Orchestra for the Soluna Festival, is a spacy, psychedelic piece that juxtaposed images from nature (plants, water, trees, etc.) with that of a violin, projected on the back wall of the stage.
- A young woman in a light blue dress and bright red shoes merrily walks along the street with a huge, colorful, long-stemmed tropical metal flower in her hand. She smashes the flower into the windows of parked cars as she passes them.
- In this music video mockumentary, Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist trains her camera on the nude male body, challenging the tropes of the genre and of pop culture in general, as her anonymous male subject is more puppet than pop star.
- A constantly moving camera dives deep into Rist's mouth and pops out of her anus, only to whirl back up to her open mouth - giving you the sensation of being swallowed and expelled, swallowed and expelled, into infinity.
- A crescendo of female moaning accompanies frenetically paced clips of bodies interlaced with footage of an erupting volcano. Rist's objective is to visualize sexual arousal with the help of a small camera equipment attached to both bodies.
- Specifically designed for the 4th floor of the New Museum in New York, this immersive video art work is a perfect example of how to create an interaction between public and installation, as the audience can lie down and relax in sofa beds.
- In this music video pastiche, artist Pipilotti Rist annexes the clichés of rock music with her own tools, pushing pop's repetitive strategies and representations of women to absurd lengths as she hysterically sings Happiness is a Warm Gun.
- A bikini-clad woman is floating and swimming through the waves in a bright blue ocean as various domestic objects are sinking to the seabed, immersing audiences in the vibrant colors of video art and melancholic pop music lyrics.
- This sensual, slow-motion video installation shows the artist, with her shocking-pink hair, lying naked on the rain-soaked earth.
- Single-channel video installation by Swiss avant-garde artist Pipilotti Rist featuring LCD monitor installed in a hole in the floor, and sound system, where the naked artist is seen struggling as she's swallowed in a bath of bubbling lava.
- Single-channel video installation, hanging LED light installation and media player; dimensions variable.
- A lyrical tale of a witch's coven is played over images of a person where each body part symbolically represents an area of the world. Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist explores the macrocosm of humanity in this video, art and music combination.
- Projected against two walls, this video art work offers a journey inside the human body, through a three-dimensional animation, as the audience loses its sense of awareness and is transported into a fully immersive, sensory environment.
- This multichannel video installation incorporates found objects, egg cartons, clear tubes, and coffee cup lids, hung from the ceiling to diffuse the light of the video show and create a reflective environment to be navigated by the viewer.
- Silent single-channel video installation featuring the artist's iconic self-portrait that shows her flattening her face against a pane of glass, her vivid red lipstick smeared along one cheek, her wide pale blue eyes staring at the viewer.
- Two-channel video and sound installation, color, with carpet and sheepskin; dimensions variable. Sound by Heinz Rohrer and Pipilotti Rist.
- Framed by blissful snowy mountains and clear blue sky, a woman is giving birth in an embedded video insert. The footage includes the cutting with scissors of the mother's vagina, as well as the newborn's first appearance.
- A daytime fantasy featuring earth nymphs, this short video work is an adapted version of Rist's installation "I Couldn't Agree With You More" for screening purposes, and to watch lying down on your left side or turning monitor 90 degrees.
- Juxtaposed images of Rist collapsing to the ground with bursts of wildly scrambled electronic distortion show how she explores the defects and imperfections of the video medium, which carry echoes of psychological and personal mistakes.
- Unflinching displays of the artist's own menstrual blood are juxtaposed with images of gemstones, while swooping, close-up shots of Rist's arms and legs are followed by archival footage of lunar fly-bys mixed into a surreal radial montage.
- This video art work features Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist lip-synching to Kevin Coyne's 1973 song 'Jacky and Edna', her image superimposed with fleeting images seen from the window of a moving train.