A circular route with works of art by students of the HSLU Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts.
Start and finish at Hotel Handeck.
Free of charge.
Art & Grimsel is taking place for the second time since 2023 and presents artistic interventions along a hiking trail in the middle of the impressive Grimselwelt. Students of HSLU Design, Film, Art were invited to explore this unique environment – a place where nature and technology merge in a special way.
The resulting works reflect themes such as hidden treasures, work clothes, cloud formations and other facets of life above and below ground. They invite you on a journey of discovery through a landscape in which man, nature and energy engage in an exciting dialog.
Art & Grimsel presents artistic interventions along a hiking trail set within the striking landscape of the Grimsel region. Students from the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts – were invited to explore this unique environment, where nature and technology intertwine in remarkable ways.
The resulting works reflect on themes such as hidden treasures, workwear, cloud formations, and other aspects of life both above and beneath the surface. They invite visitors on a journey of discovery through a landscape where humans, nature, and energy engage in a compelling dialog.
Managed by :
Sebastian Utzni
Céline Brunko
A collaboration between
HSLU, Grimselwelt and KWO
Work from :
Alexander Balsiger
Anna Chirra
Astrid Robertsson
Chrigl Hess Caduff
Emma Eickhout
George Stokes
Imogen Turner
Kasia Capello
Katja Voinova
Lucas de Lemos
Lennard Stoll
Moni Zeis
Nicolas Frésard
Petra Weber
Sabrina Brunner
William Studer
Zones of Connection
Light on fabric
Cyanotype on textile, 110 cm x 160cm
Dragon
Inspired by the underground pipes that pump the water for Grimselwelt's hydropower, as well as the folklore of the Stollenwurm; "The dragon of the mine- tunnels", which has a serpent-like body, originating from the Bernese Alps.
Wood, Metal and Fabric; 4m x 2.5m (x2)
Wall stones
"Take a stone in your trouser bag and düü bischt nee mee chrank."
A sentence that invites you to open your eyes, search for special stones - and carry them with you for a while. In an area characterized by impressive rocks and hidden crystals, a silent dialogue is created between man and mountain.
There is a wooden chest by the side of the path. She collects these stones. If you like, you can take one with you on the hike and put it back afterwards. You are also welcome to add your own finds to the collection.
The chest was built with old wood from the KWO's Power plants and workshops and measures 60 cm in length and 40 cm in width. It rests on the wooden remains of the work underground and wood from the beautiful Grimselwelt.
stray from the path
If you can't see the forest for all the emails, then walking can also feel like a to-do. You may be walking along the path, but the beauty of the forest passes you by unnoticed.
To stray from the path is an invitation to stop. Take a cushion with you on your walk and decide at some point to leave the path and stay somewhere.
6 seat cushions approx. 40x40cm, screen print on cotton canvas, used workwear from Grimsel Hydro, zine riso print
learn from Monsters to survive
Her nails are made of roots, which dig the earth the time has come for her to go out to the surface,
the time is now
The creature needs thistle to survive
And there are no flowers underground
The colors are where the sun lights them up
It now rests in a place that humans have abandoned
Waiting to find that flower, in order to feed on his resilience and his love Monsters also need to see Flowers
Monsters also need to learn to love
Learn from monsters to survive ..
Dimension: 1.50 cm × 50 cm ~ jute bags; roots; wire; dried thistle flowers; stones; wood; fabrics
Cumulus
Steel, approx. 200 x 100 cm
Wind change I
The Wash
The Wash is part of an ongoing series of installations by Kasia Capello, exploring the passing of time, fragility, and change. Installed between trees, it consists of two abstract acrylic paintings on canvas (160 × 250 cm each), five workers' jackets, and two sheer curtains. The materials are exposed to the weather over time-inviting wind, rain, and decay to act as collaborators.
The jackets suggest work once done, or never finished. The curtains drift, veiling and revealing. The paintings absorb stains, watermarks, and silence. Nothing is protected. Everything is placed to be marked. The Wash presents a state of transition. It listens. It holds. It slowly disappears.
Subsurface
approx. 2x0.25 m, rocks, recycled cotton fabric, cyanotype chemicals, boat varnish
Stollen worm
I built it from old metal parts, some of which are things that would otherwise be thrown away. The structure is reminiscent of a plant or an animal, but is technical at the same time. I am interested in how old stories can live on - even in new materials. For me, the tunnel worm is a creature between nature, technology and imagination.
Iron; 100 × 40 cm
Mermen
Presumably, however, the mermen in that region were not so evil from the beginning, they must have become so only later; for it is still said today that, as elsewhere, they used to feed the cows there too. Such a rhyme is still known to every child there today. It is called: "Good Hans von Weissenfluh, Take your cow again and her fat calf too!"
mixed media, 1m