Grandfather Was a Self-Made Hairdresser
After that Szeemann was as hot as he could ever be. His unlikely follow-up was an exhibition devoted to the life of his late grandfather Étienne. It was staged in Harald's former apartment in Bern.
"Grandfather" anticipated the now-familiar sort of installation art that plays at being an exhibition or museum display. We can identify as "Szeemannesque" Jim Shaw's Wig Museum and the Marciano's room of Masonic artifacts; David Wilson's Museum of Jurassic Technology
Most shows re-creating influential past exhibitions struggle with the fact that many original objects have been lost, can't be traced, or won't be lent. Fortunately Szeemann kept almost everything, and his archives are now housed at the Getty Research Institute. They have lent most of the objects, the Bern originals. The ICA LA has constructed a to-scale stage set of the Bern apartment's floorpan within its main exhibition space.
One hall includes meta-commentary from family members, folding the comment board into the exhibition. François Szeemann told Harald: "I liked Grandfather, but I don't have any illusions. You are just as egotistical as him. When he was alive you never cared about him much. But now you are doing an exhibition."
The Getty Research Institute will present a companion exhibition of its Szeemann holdings, "Harald Szeemann: Museum of Obsessions" (Feb. 6–May 6, 2018). After the two L.A. shows close, they will effectively merge and travel together to Bern, Düsseldorf, Turin, and New York.
Below, a mannequin-bust displaying "The Beautiful Hen," a Louis XVI coif. It's a bird, it's a ship, it's a hairdo. Any questions?
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