Alice Waters, chef and co-founder of the famous CaliÂfornian slow food restauÂrant Chez Panisse, summed up the close connecÂtion between art and cooking: â...âthey are both reacÂtive and creative, imitating and adapting to each other.â So is there a connecÂtion between what happens in the studios of artists and what happens in their kitchens? Are there referÂences to their work and personÂality? Are artists particÂuÂlarly creative when it comes to the everyday act of cooking? With the help of anecÂdotes and photos about their kitchens and eating habits, we provide insights into the culiÂnary worlds of well-known artists.
This time we look at the word and food artist Daniel Spoerri and created (hopefully in his spirit) a little Spoerri ABC:
SPOERRI ABC
A is for Ab Ovo exhibition
It could really only be Daniel Spoeeri who could cook up the idea of organizing an exhibition that is only open for the time it takes to hard-boil an egg. The Swiss artist, who was born in Romania in 1930, systematically implemented this action at Cologneâs Galerie Zwirner in 1963, leaving his works hanging for a mere seven minutes. In doing so, Spoerri humorously upended the rules of the art market and, incidentally, also helped to fill his own stomach. The egg as a primeval form of food and symbol of life has fascinated Spoerri throughout his life: He has collected literary egg quotations along with all conceivable kitchen utensils for tackling eggs.
B is for Bread
Thereâs another basic building block of nutrition that plays an important role in Spoerriâs biography: bread. As a young, penniless student in Paris, he used to keep stale bread in a drawer and would subsequently simmer it in water with stock cubes at the end of the month to make bread soup. One day, he had the idea of buying a tin of cheap pepper, which drastically improved the taste of the soup. Spoerri dubbed this âwowâ moment âthe root of his cooking contagionâ, the starting point of his lifelong passion for cooking.
C is for Catalogue Tabou
On the occasion of the âGrocery Storeâ exhibition in Copenhagen in 1961, Spoerri had eighty fresh rolls baked that were filled with garbage, nails and broken glass, and then proceeded to distribute them as a catalogue to visitors. This âCatalogue Tabouâ was intended as a comment on food wastage, but the bakersâ guild nevertheless reacted indignantly and wrote letters of protest. The theme of bread popped up again in Spoerriâs work in 1970, this time in the form of everyday objects such as shoes or a typewriter, which the artist filled with dough and baked.
D is for Dinner
In addition to Object Art, in 1968 Spoerri discovered the staging of themed dinners as a means of self-expression. His spectacular banquets were intended to stimulate not just the stomach but also the mind: They called into question culinary and artistic conventions, highlighted socio-cultural aspects of food, and challenged the notions of taste among guests. Hence, he shocked participants at a goulash dinner in Heidelberg by announcing that they had just eaten horsemeat, only to revoke the claim shortly afterwards. Taking as his theme âThe cuisine of the worldâs poorâ, Spoerri used just a few inexpensive ingredients to prepare extremely delicious and nutritious dishes for his guests, such as pea porridge with bacon or stockfish with potatoes.
E is for Eat Art
Spoerri invented the concept of âEat Artâ in the late 1960s as an overarching term for artistic exploration âof everything that is edible or seems edibleâ. The works created under this motto are testament to Spoerriâs interest in the cultural significance of eating and cooking, in the fundamental principles of nutrition, and in the act of eating as an existential process.
F is for âFallenbilderâ
When Spoerri came up with the idea in 1960 of sticking the remnants of a meal â dirty plates, emptied glasses, a crumpled cigarette packet â to the table precisely as he found them, then turning the base 90 degrees and hanging it on the wall, it was the birth of the first of his iconic âFallenbilderâ, or picture-traps. A year later, MoMA purchased one of these three-dimensional still lifes â with the remains of the breakfast consumed by his then girlfriend Kichka Baticheff â and he went on to produce countless variations over the course of his life. Letting âthe trap snap shutâ â i.e. capturing everyday objects in their spontaneous arrangement â at precisely the right moment in time is still a leitmotif of his work today.
G is for Gift Shop
Two years after his DĂŒsseldorf restaurant was launched, Spoerri opened the matching Eat Art gallery on the next floor up with an exhibition of his bread dough objects. In the âsouvenir shopâ, as he jokingly dubbed the gallery, many of his artist friends and colleagues exhibited edible artworks, among them Joseph Beuys, Dieter Roth, AndrĂ© Thomkins, and Robert Filliou.
H is for Homonym Dinner
In 1978, Spoerri organized his âHommage Ă Karl Marxâ, a banquet to which he invited only guests who bore well-known names. Using the telephone book, he tracked down Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Richard Wagner, Friedrich Engels and many more âcelebritiesâ, with a Herr Hinz and a Herr Kunz (the German equivalent of âTom, Dick and Harryâ) also represented. He also served suitably illustrious dishes: Schillerlocken, Mozartkugeln, Hitchcock orange juice and Bismarck herring.
I is for Island Life
In 1966, after almost ten years in Paris, where he had gained a foothold as an artist with Eat Art, Spoerri made a radical break: He moved with Kichka Baticheff to the remote Greek island of Symi to dedicate himself solely to cooking for an entire year. The limited range of foods available on the island, coupled with the absolute freshness of the ingredients â vegetables from the island gardens, fish caught just hours before, honey with the intense aroma of the herbs that grew in the stony ground â fueled Spoerriâs creativity. He made daily notes of what he cooked and ate and subsequently published a âGastronomic Diaryâ of his trip in 1967.
J wie Galerie J
In 1963, Spoerri achieved the ultimate fusion of art and gastronomy in an exhibition at the Galerie J in Paris: There, he opened a temporary restaurant and spent two weeks as âle Chef Danielâ, cooking a version of his conceptual banquet every evening for 30 guests. As waiters, he hired art critics, and at the end of every evening Spoerri selected a table that he fixed in its momentary state and then turned into one of his picture-traps.
K is for Kitchen Utensils
Fascinated by the diversity of everyday utility items, Spoerri collected kitchen utensils over many years. When he had amassed 723 kitchen items, he decided to reduce his collection and concentrate on potato peelers: âIt seemed to me that the typically Swiss virtue of thrift was expressed most perfectly and ironically in this invention.â This became another collection that comprised 100 slightly varying potato peelers.
L is for LE PĂTISSIER PITTORESQUE
Spoerri lived out his passion for food not only practically, but also in theoretical terms: In the early 1970s he began collecting cookbooks and now owns more than 800 editions, including rarities such as the signed first edition of âLe pĂątissier pittoresqueâ by Marie-Antoine CarĂȘme from the year 1815. Spoerri does not use recipes for cooking, however; at most, he takes the books as inspiration for new flavor combinations.
M is for menu
Shortly after his return from Symi, âle Chef Danielâ opened his âRestaurant Spoerriâ in DĂŒsseldorf in 1968. Alongside beef steaks, he also put python schnitzel, ant omelets and snake ragout on the menu with the aim of expanding his guestsâ taste horizons; he created an ongoing series of picture-traps and decorated the walls with works by artist friends. More âmultimedia super-happening artworkâ than eatery, the place quickly became a central meeting point for the local art scene.
N is for Noveau RĂ©alisme
âArt is life, life is artâ was the motto of Noveau RĂ©alisme, the artistic movement Spoerri co-founded in 1960 and which included his colleagues Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, Niki de Saint Phalle and Raymond Hains, among others. Despite huge differences in their artistic practice, the members were united by a rejection of Abstract Expressionism and a determination to approach the reality of everyday life in their work.
O is for Ordinary and Wholesome
Spoerri prefers to eat simple, uncomplicated dishes. Michelin-starred cuisine with its strict set of rules is suspect to him, as are cookbooks with pages and pages of cooking instructions. You just need to know a few basic rules, then the cooking itself is actually pretty easy, he believes: âWithout a lot of trallala â just add it, even burnt it sometimes tastes distinctive, but it just shouldnât be soggy, and if itâs oversalted you can just add more water, milk, or something else.â
P is for Palindrome
Based on the principle of the palindrome, which reads the same backwards as it does forwards, Spoerri designed a series of Eat Art banquets: He served all courses in seemingly reverse order, starting with a cigar-shaped grissini, a coffee, which was actually a consommé served in coffee cups, and a dessert, which looked similar to an ice cream with chocolate pralines, but actually turned out to be mashed potatoes with meatballs.
Q is for Quality Space
A mere 12 square meters was the size of room number 13 at the Hotel Carcassonne in Paris, into which the artist moved shortly before his thirtieth birthday. He stayed for six years and despite the cramped quarters experienced great things there: production of the first picture-traps and the birth of his identity of an artist. As an homage to this formative place, in 1998 Spoerri had the room reconstructed true-to-life in bronze, for which he nevertheless had to rely entirely on his memory, since the owner barred him entry to the hotel, which still exists today, as he was annoyed by the Spoerri fans bombarding him with questions about the famous room.
R is for recipe (for spice balls)
In 1970, Spoerri published the following recipe in the magazine âTwenâ, entitled âThe love balls of Sheikh Muhammad Ibn-Muhammad an-Nafzawiâ: âCrush in a mortar: 1 teaspoon each of black and white pepper, 1 teaspoon of coriander, 3 cloves, 2 whole nutmegs, 1 pinch of mace, 2 sticks of cinnamon. Finely chop: 250g each of dried figs, bananas, dates and apricots, 1-2 ginger roots in syrup. Finely chop: 250g total of hazelnuts, almonds, peanuts. Place in a large bowl: 250g raw cane sugar, 200g butter, 50g rosemary honey, 3 soup spoons of ginger syrup, 1 demitasse of Pernod. Add the other ingredients and knead well. Roll into nut-sized balls, coat in cane sugar and chill. The directions are for guidance only. More or lesser of one or the other ingredient may change the taste but perhaps only for the better.â A note on preparation time can be found under âT is for timeâ.
S is for Seasoning
Spoerri once compared the significance of art for society with the use of salt and pepper in preparing dishes. His own spice rack was appropriately well-stocked, and he exhibited it in its original form in 1963. In the enormous three by two-meter rack, the artist stored not only mustard and sambal pastes, but also ketchup and various Heinz sauces, angosturas, curry, lovage, dill and hyssop powder, as well as a pack of Maggi seasoning â an âaroma of homeâ that was irreplaceable for the Swiss artist.
T is for Time
While the time Spoerri spends fixing the objects of his picture-traps to their base makes him nervous, he actually finds cooking to be a form of meditation. He deliberately allows himself more time to cook than to eat and notes this accordingly as a comment on his spice ball recipe (see âR is for recipeâ): âOf course these balls take time. After all, weâre not making them because we want to save time that we can use to go to the cinema, darn stockings or do whatever, but rather because we want to while away a couple of hours in the kitchen, mashing, kneading, stirring, and turning our kitchens into a laboratory of oriental scents, without forgetting to sip on a Pernod or two.â
U is for Ugo Dossi
His tireless drive to continually initiate new projects led Spoerri to southern Tuscany in the early 1990s, where he began laying out a sculpture park. âIl Giardino di Daniel Spoerriâ has now been open for more than 20 years and covers a 16-hectare site that combines 113 installations by 55 artists, many of whom have been close friends and acquaintances of Spoerri for decades. One of them is Ugo Dossi, who presented edible chocolate embryos at the Eat Art gallery in 1971 and who is represented in the Giardino with the iron sculpture âThe Kissâ.
V is for Vienna
After leading an almost nomadic life with countless different stages, including in Zurich, Paris, New York, DĂŒsseldorf and Berlin, in 2008 Spoerri moved to Vienna, where he still lives today. Less than one hourâs drive away, in Hadersdorf am Kamp, he also put down roots, buying a former silent movie theater and a monastery building and transforming them into an exhibition venue, the âKunst-Staulager AB ARTâ, and a slow-food restaurant that holds regular Eat Art banquets based on his ideas from the 1970s.
W is for Work Guides
âYou are what you eatâ, claimed the culinary philosopher Carl Friedrich von Rumohr back in 1822. His work âGeist der Kochkunstâ (âSpirit of the Cooking Artsâ), in which he called for a simple and seasonal diet and reflected on the interplay between cuisine and culture, had a lasting influence on Spoerri. He took it with him on his trip to Symi and peppered the âGastronomic Diaryâ he compiled there with quotes from the book. Apparently, the two also shared a sense of humor: They both claimed to be âuniversal dilettantesâ.
X is for âX pour Yvesâ
Ten years after the signing of the manifesto in Yves Kleinâs studio in Paris, the Nouveaux RĂ©alistes dissolved their movement. Spoerri organized a fitting farewell dinner in Milan: âLâUltima Cenaâ, the last supper. The menu, designed in the form of a black and silver sympathy card, was signed by all the members â only Yves Klein was missing as he had died some years earlier. In his place, his former wife Rotraud Uecker signed âX pour Yvesâ.
Y is for Yves Klein
Das Beerdigungsbankett des Nouveau RĂ©alisme am 19. November 1970 wurde eine der aufwendigsten Dinner, die Spoerri bis dato umgesetzt hatte. Jeder KĂŒnstler*innen der Gruppierung bekam seinen eigenen Tisch, auf dem eine essbare Interpretation seiner Werke serviert wurde. FĂŒr Yves Klein gab Spoerri eine Reproduktion seines Bildes âCi-gĂźt lâespaceâ in Form einer riesigen, mit Blattgold ĂŒberzogenen Cremetorte in Auftrag, die mit SchaumzuckerschwĂ€mmen und rosa Marzipanrosen dekoriert war.
Z is for Zest
Spoerriâs work as an object artist and organizer of culinary happenings was what brought him the greatest recognition, but a look at his curriculum vitae reveals him to be a talented jack-of-all-trades. After trying his hand in his youth as a shoeshine boy, vegetable seller, trader, photographer and tour guide, he had a lightning career in the ballet â even making it to the Stadttheater Bern as a solo dancer. He also worked as a director and poet, and only afterwards devoted himself to the visual arts. Yet he remained true to his versatility and acted, often simultaneously, as a bookseller, restaurant owner, exhibition organizer, writer, and professor.