glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation

luma foundation unveils richter’s strip tower in engadin

 

Presented by the Luma Foundation in Engadin, Switzerland, as part of Elevation 1049, STRIP TOWER (962) brings Gerhard Richter’s long-running investigations into the Alpine landscape, extending his practice beyond the canvas and into three-dimensional space. On view until the spring of 2029, the work draws from the methodology of his Strip Paintings, where a single painted gesture is subjected to successive acts of photographing, scanning, digital slicing, and stretching.  What begins as an analogue mark is transformed into a system of color bands governed by repetition and chance. In the tower, this process leaves the flat surface behind entirely, becoming architectural and spatial.

 

Rising over five meters, the sculpture, recently presented at Serpentine, London, consists of eight perpendicular panels clad in glazed ceramic tiles, each carrying vertically elongated color stripes. The intersecting panels allow people to walk between the surfaces, shifting the encounter from distant viewing to bodily experience. Light reflects off the glossy surfaces, while weather, cloud cover, snow, and seasonal shifts continuously recompose the work. 

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
all images by Luzi Seiler courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation, unless stated otherwise

 

 

STRIP TOWER (962): site, repetition, and slow looking

 

Richter’s relationship with Sils Maria stretches back decades. He first visited the village in 1989 and has returned regularly since, drawn to its distinctive light and contemplative atmosphere. Long associated with intellectual retreat and sustained reflection, the site offers a fitting context for a work that resists instant legibility. STRIP TOWER (962) encourages repeated visits and incremental perception, asking viewers to notice subtle variations rather than dramatic gestures.

 

The placement of the sculpture near Lake Silvaplana embeds it directly within the Alpine ecosystem. Its ceramic skin responds to moisture and temperature, while its colors shift under changing skies. The experience of the work unfolds over time, aligning with the German artist’s broader concerns with uncertainty, reflection, and the instability of visual certainty.

 

With this installation, the Luma Foundation tests how contemporary art can operate outside conventional exhibition formats, proposing the Alps as a landscape where artistic experimentation unfolds over time. Elevation 1049 will return to Gstaad and the Saanenland in 2027, curated by Mohamed Almusibli, but in the Engadin, Richter’s tower will remain, marking the landscape with color, light, and duration.

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
the work draws from the methodology of Gerhard Richter’s Strip Paintings

 

 

elevation 1049 and the alpine landscape as a thinking field

 

Since its inception in 2014, Elevation 1049 has approached the Alps as an intellectual and ecological field. Through site-responsive commissions, the initiative has explored the relationship between contemporary art and geography, climate, history, and local communities beyond institutional settings. The installation of STRIP TOWER (962) in the Engadin demonstrates how long-term artworks can foster sustained public engagement.

 

Maja Hoffmann, Founder and President of the Luma Foundation, frames the project as part of a broader commitment to situating significant artistic voices in contexts that demand attentiveness and responsibility. She describes the work as ‘a rare synthesis of conceptual rigor, formal clarity, and material precision,’ noting how its presence affirms the Alps as a site of serious cultural production rather than passive scenery.

 

Installed for an initial period of three years, STRIP TOWER (962) emphasizes art as a shared public experience unfolding gradually and in dialogue with place. Visitors can walk through the sculpture, pause within its interior, and return under different conditions, encountering a work that is both monumental and quietly responsive. Its scale does not overwhelm the landscape but frames it, inviting reflection on how perception itself is shaped by environment.

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
the sculpture consists of eight perpendicular panels clad in glazed ceramic tiles

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
light reflects off the glossy surfaces

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
sharpening attention to color, light, and movement | image courtesy of Elevation 1049

glazed-color-bands-sculptural-tower-gerhard-richter-alpine-installation-luma-foundation-elevation-1049-sils-maria-designboom-large01

image by Victor & Simon / Joana Luz, courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
the intersecting panels allow people to walk between the surfaces | image by Victor & Simon / Joana Luz, courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
shifting the encounter from distant viewing to bodily experience | image by Victor & Simon / Joana Luz, courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
seasonal shifts continuously recompose the work | image by Victor & Simon / Joana Luz, courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation

glazed-color-bands-sculptural-tower-gerhard-richter-alpine-installation-luma-foundation-elevation-1049-sils-maria-designboom-large02

colors shift under changing skies | image by Schaub Stierli, courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation Fotografie

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
proposing the Alps as a landscape where artistic experimentation unfolds over time | image by Schaub Stierli, courtesy of Gerhard Richter Kunststiftung and Luma Foundation Fotografie

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
the site offers a fitting context for a work that resists instant legibility

glazed color bands rise as sculptural tower in gerhard richter's alpine installation
the placement of the sculpture near Lake Silvaplana embeds it directly within the Alpine ecosystem

 

 

project info:

 

name: STRIP TOWER (962)

artist: Gerhard Richter

location: Via d’Lej, 7514 Sils Maria, Engadin, Switzerland

 

dates: January 27th, 2026 – Spring 2029

presented by: Luma Foundation | @luma_arles as part of Elevation 1049 | @elevation1049

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