


“FEAR EATS THE SOUL by Rirkrit Tiravanija (b. 1961) blurs the boundaries between art and life, a key aspect of the artist’s practice that has led him at times to abandon the art object altogether in favor of creating shared, immersive experiences. In the Gallery building, abandoned wall frames will be placed inside spaces they might previously have divided, in keeping with Tiravanija’s instinct to invert the expected function of an interior space. The presentation will offer a suite of interactive activities, including a soup kitchen serving recipes provided by the artist, a silk-screening T-shirt workshop, a facsimile of the artist’s first one-person gallery show in New York installed with ceramic sculptures, and the words FEAR EATS THE SOUL spray-painted by Tiravanija directly on a Gallery wall, in characters that will be obscured over time under layers of graffiti by local artists.” Glenstone Museum
The vision for FEAR EATS THE SOUL came to life at Glenstone, a gleaming institution that is otherwise as far as possible from a room full of graffiti. As Tiravanija planned, our work stripped the meditative quiet that the place otherwise imposes on visitors and got them to engage with the space and each other. It was exciting, dynamic, playful — and it happened every time.
It was an honor and a privilege to work on this installation