Marianne Eigenheer


Marianne Eigenheer was a Swiss artist. She was active both as an academic and as a working artist who displayed works in Europe, Australia, and the United States. Her work was done mostly on small and large canvasses, including some wall drawings. She resided in Basel and London.

Life

Before she turned her attention to art, Eigenheer was set on a career path to become a pianist. She began receiving piano lessons as a child. However, she herself wanted to become a composer, which was not possible at the time. Instead, she began drawing and painting after finishing school. In 1964, she completed her teaching certification in Aarau. Later, in 1970, she completed an art education diploma at the Lucerne School of Art and Design, Lucerne, and began working as an artist. From 1973–1976, she studied art history, anthropology and psychology at the Zurich University.
From 1971–88, she worked as a research assistant at the Museum of Art Lucerne with Jean-Christophe Ammann and later with Martin Kunz. In 1987, she was granted an artist residency in Tokyo and, in 2001/2002, the residency of the Landis & Gyr Foundation in London.
She was a lecturer and art professor at various art academies and colleges:1994–96 a teaching position at the Kunstpädagogisches Institut at Goethe University Frankfurt; 1995–96 a professorship at the University of Art and Design, Offenbach; 1997–2007 a professorship for painting and graphic art at the State Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart. From 2003 to 2009 she was Professor and Director of the Institute for Curatorship and Education at the Edinburgh College of Art and was granted an honorary professorship at ECA in 2009. From 2011 to 2013, she was a tutor at the Royal College of Art in London. Marianne Eigenheer lived in Basel and London.

Work

Eigenheer’s work has its roots in drawing, in which the freely moving line precedes the flat, pictorial dimension. Her drawings are gesticulating, free line works on paper, in which the spontaneous, subconscious action is combined with conscious formal and content-related decision-making. In the 1980s, the important series Bilder zur Lage, of postcard-sized drawings, was created. They are semiabstract forms and “mergers of entirely different beings,” which attain comic-like, erotic associations, symbolic elements and also a great dynamic. At this time, she also painted large canvases, as part of the series Misere des Herzens , with animal silhouettes, human figures and hybrid beings, who seem to float or lie before monochrome backgrounds. Eigenheer describes the creation of these pictures as follows:
Later came works on canvas and wall drawings, characterized by the use of red, black and gold, consisting mostly of borders, features and amorphous, semi-abstract forms and form developments. These include the wall drawings Das Buch der 5 Ringe von Mushahi, 1991, at Kiel Central Station or Les Guédés dansent toujours.
on paper, 70 × 50 cm, 2015

Group exhibitions