Andrea Zittel: gouaches and illustrations, exh. cat., Schaulager, Basel (26 April – 21 September 2008), Göttingen, Steidl, 2008
→Andrea Zittel, lay of my land, exh. cat., Stockholm Konsthall, Stockholm (9 September – 11 December 2011), Munich, Prestel, 2011
Andrea Zittel: Wallsprawl, Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, 25 March – 31 May 2014
→Andrea Zittel, Middelhelm Museum, Antwerp, 13 June – 27 September 2015
→Andrea Zittel, Palm Springs Art Museum, Palm Springs, 11 March – 22 May 2017
American sculptor and multimedia artist.
Andrea Zittel graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting and sculpture from the University of San Diego, followed by a Master of Fine Arts in sculpture from the Rhode Island School of Design. In the early 1990s she created her first Living Units, experimental housing units with a minimal and geometric design, which, in their compact format, contain everything needed to live: a bathroom, bed and kitchen are fitted into a box, foldable and portable, with wood the dominant raw material. Influenced by modern design and contemporary architecture, in 1992 she established A-Z Enterprise, which produced custom supplies, housing and vehicles, all personalized according to her clients’ personalities. The company was located in New York, in a house that acted as a space for living, manufacturing and exchanging; in 2000 she relocated the project to the middle of the California desert, where a community of artists have been put to work. In the tradition of land art and creators such as Walter De Maria, Zittel is directing the The High Desert Test Sites, a series of experimental art sites.
Blurring the line between art and life, she extended her area of inquiry to include her own lifestyle: dwelling, food and clothing (dresses with clean lines, made of natural materials, which she wears for an entire season). By doing so, she constantly reinvents her relationship with the domestic environment, tackling fundamental human needs. The functional and the practical take precedence over design. She also created A-Z Escape Vehicles, which are somewhat like small caravans that can accommodate one or two people, accessible through a hatch in the roof, and whose interiors are decorated with a rocky landscape made from fibreglass or a comfortable padded living room. Her work, intrinsically participatory and environmentally conscious, takes into account the human body and its dimensions, needs and desires. Her process is based on the requirement to live in the most enjoyable conditions, in harmony with the natural environment and in a self-sufficient manner. Zittel also produces paintings that are related to her other works. Her most significant projects include the Non-Manhattan Project, deployed in 1999 in Central Park. In 2008 she had a solo exhibition at the Schaulager in Basel.