
Urns (Set of 8)
<p>Avoiding any signature style, Thomas Schütte has produced an oeuvre of perplexing diversity, including architectural models, photographs, sculpture, and watercolor drawings. His decidedly unimposing, antiheroic works explore the cultural, economic, historical, and social conditions of his native Germany with a detached, often humorous, sensibility. Much of Schütte’s work addresses the almost existential difficulty postwar German artists encounter in attempting to create monuments and memorials. As such, it evidences an ongoing preoccupation with themes of death, mourning, and collective memory. This is true of <em>Urns</em>, an installation comprising eight ceramic vessels glazed in a palette of solid colors marked by streaks, drips, and other surface effects. Ranging from three to five feet in height, these fragile containers at once imply living bodies and oversize repositories for their ashes. The vessels are intended to be grouped together, like a family. Displayed closed, these mysterious containers prompt speculation about what might be contained inside. One of the urns, however, lacks a top and bottom; viewing the installation from above reveals that it is empty.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1999
- Dimensions
- Installed: 165 × 177.8 × 188 cm (65 × 70 × 74 1/16 in.); 162.6 × 177.8 × 188 cm (64 × 70 × 74 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Thomas Schütte
Artist

Mixed Media
Contemporary German artist Thomas Schütte works in a wide range of media including watercolor, printmaking, sculpture and installation in varying scales.
Full artist profile →More
More by Thomas Schütte
Mother Earth
2024 · Glazed ceramic on artist’s steel base
Krieger
2012 · Wood
Woodcuts
2011 · Portfolio of nine woodcuts
General
2011 · Aluminum, with shirt
Untitled from Woodcuts
2011 · One from a portfolio of nine woodcuts
Untitled from Woodcuts
2011 · One from a portfolio of nine woodcuts
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Thomas Schütte
- Year
- 1999
- Dimensions
- Installed: 165 × 177.8 × 188 cm (65 × 70 × 74 1/16 in.); 162.6 × 177.8 × 188 cm (64 × 70 × 74 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1999-101171
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





