"People seem to fear art. Art has always been a word for this thing that can’t be rationalised; when you see or hear something that you struggle to explain. But that’s its strength, of course, that’s what the word “art” is for."
Selected Works
Bio
Urs Fischer is a Swiss conceptual artist known for his large-scale sculptures and installations that explore impermanence, materiality, and popular culture.
Born in Zurich in 1973, he studied photography at the Schule für Gestaltung before living and working in London, Los Angeles, Berlin, and New York. Urs’s practice spans sculpture, painting, photography, and installation, often transforming everyday objects such as chairs, tables, or even bread into disorienting, whimsical, and thought-provoking forms. His works, such as What if the phone rings (2003) and Stuhl mit (1995–2001), engage with absence, presence, and the processes of creation and destruction, blending humour with profound reflection.