Mattijs Visser


Mat Visser studied architecture in Delft, the Netherlands and is since then an organiser of performances and art exhibitions. He was head of exhibitions at Museum Kunst Palast in Düsseldorf for eight years, curated historical exhibitions and is best known for his Artempo exhibition at Palazzo Fortuny in Venice. He was the founding director of the international ZERO foundation in Düsseldorf from 2008 to 2017 and is a researcher at the Institute for Contemporary Archeology in Antwerp. As director from he advises museums around the world on collection presentations.

Exhibitions

Mattijs Visser has been producing exhibitions and performances since 1984, with artists as Ilya Kabakov, Robert Mapplethorpe, Helmut Newton, Jan Fabre, Robert Wilson, Kimsooja, Wim Delvoye, Laurie Anderson, El Anatsui, Anish Kapoor, Dragset and Elmgreen, Tino Sehgal, Spencer Tunick and Carsten Höller. He organised for the Museum Kunst Palast and the Royal Academy of Arts London classical exhibitions as Bonjour Russia, masterworks from the four Russian Museums. For Museum Kunst Palast the Late Works by Andy Warhol, Dubuffet and Art Brut, the travelling show Africa Remix, the Caravaggio show and Diana+Actaeon, a view on nudity. He curated the exhibition Slow Art / Slow Life in which contemporary and performance art met with classical art. For the Quadriennale Düsseldorf the international ZERO show. For the City of Venice he made the concept for the prize-winning exhibition Artempo at the Venetian Palazzo Mariano Fortuny with the collection of Axel Vervoordt and the City of Venice. For the Nuit Blanche in Paris a large SKY-event with floating objects by Otto Piene. For Museum Kunst Palast he curated in 2009 an exhibition with accompanying publication for Marlene Dumas. 2009 he was co-curator for the Moscow Biennale and for the Venice Biennale he curated together with Daniel Birnbaum the large Gutai show at the Central Pavilion. His exhibition ZERO in NY at Sperone Westwater was nominated in 2009 by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum NY as best gallery exhibition of the year 2008. For the ZERO foundation, he curated exhibitions with Norbert Kricke, Jean Tinguely at the Tony Cragg Foundation Wuppertal, and Jef Verheyen and ZERO friends at the Langen Foundation Neuss. 2013 The Museum of Old and New Art in Tasmania invited him and Jean-Hubert Martin to organise the travelling show "Theater of the World. After receiving prices for best design and lighting, the show travelled from Hobart 2013 to Maison Rouge in Paris. For the Guggenheim New York, he conceived the large ZERO retrospective in 2015, which toured to the Gropiusbau Berlin, and the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. For the Multimedia Art Museum in Moscow and the Sabancı Museum in Istanbul, he curated in 2016 a show with Heinz Mack, Gunther Uecker and Otto Piene. The 7th Biennale Socle du Monde in Herning Denmark was conceived by Mattijs Visser and curated by Jean-Hubert Martin, Olivier Varenne and him selves. The MONA Museum of Old and New Art invited 2018 Visser to curate an exhibition around Vibration in the sixties, with the international artists from the ZERO movement. The United Nations appointed Visser as curator for an exhibition to memorate the First World War.

Projects

With 0-projects Mattijs Visser focuses on projects with historical and contemporary art, with an international network of prominent writers, researchers, and producers. 0-projects is specialised in reconstructing ideas, installations, works, historical exhibitions, and has the "archeology's" ability to tell stories that reach beyond official or formal discourse. 0-projects works mainly for museums around the world, as the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart, the Pushkin Museum in Moscow, and the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art.

Publications