Were All Breathing the Same Air: How Jeppe Heins Participatory Art Project United Schoolchildren and Heads of State During Climate Week – artnet News

Take a deep breath. Thats what Danish artist Jeppe Hein is asking the public to do as part of his participatory art project Breath With Me, which invites passerby to exhale while painting parallel vertical blue lines on canvas.

The project began as a way for Hein to center himself as he battled a serious illness, but expanded to encompass a broader group of participants and a quest for healing on a much more monumental scale. On view in New Yorks Central Parkand coinciding with a show of Heins work at 303 Gallery in Chelseathe piece measures 10 feet tall and 600 feet long.

After painting a line, Hein told artnet News, you look up at the blue sky and you say I feel good because I can breathe.'

His message resonates all the more during New York Citys Climate Week, which runs through September 29 and coincides with the UN Climate Change Summit.Breathe With Mehad a presence at the UN too, thanks toDanish art nonprofit ART 2030, which has dedicated itself to staging art projects that support the UNs 17-point agenda for global sustainable development.

Jeppe Hein, Breathe With Me (2019), Central Park, New York. Photo by Sarah Cascone.

Hein and ART2030 had already gotten the permits to stage the project in Central ParkNew Yorks communal backyardwhen the UN called the organizations founder, Danish collector Luise Faurschou, and asked if there were any plans for art projects during Climate Week. She told them about Breathe With Me. They said, Why dont you do it in our house too?' Hein recalled.

At the UN, the artist spent the Youth Action Summit and the Climate Change Summit explaining his concept to people from all over the world, many of whom didnt speak English. Several heads of state added their breath to the work, including the presidents of Greece, Peru, and Bhutan, as well as former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg. Hein missed a photo op with French President Emmanuel Macron, who stopped by while the artist was in the bathroom.

Central Park has drawn a different crowd, including hundreds of local children whove shared their breath thanks to a partnership with the education department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Their contributions stand out, the lines starting lower on the canvas due to the childrens height.

Jeppe Hein and ART2030 founder Luise Faurschou watch Michael Bloomberg add to Heins Breathe With Me (2019) at the United Nations Headquarters, New York. Photo courtesy of the artist and ART2030.

The museums director, Max Hollein, also took part. Breathe With Mewasa moving experience, and a moment of both relaxation and reflection, he told artnet News. Jeppes work is inspirational, and invites participation and collective awareness.

Despite language barriers and cultural differences, Hein has found the work to be universally relatable.Were all breathing the same air, he pointed out. Originally, he did not conceive the work as related to climate change, although he recognizes the link today.

A child adds to Jeppe Heins Breathe With Me (2019) at Central Park, New York. Photo courtesy of the artist and ART2030.

He developed a practice of painting lines while focusing on inhaling and exhaling a decade ago during a serious illness, as a way of dealing with panic attacks. The participatory element came later, when he started showing the line paintings in museums.

Hein also grew up on a bio-dynamic farm run by his parents, so hes always understood the importance of taking care of the earth. If you cant breathe, you cant live, the trees cant live, he said. Its a very important thing.

Jeppe Hein, Breathe With Me (2019), Central Park, New York. Photo by Sarah Cascone.

The artistplans to donate many of the individual canvases from Central Park to the schools from the Met program. He would have donated some to the UN, but red tape and concerns about corruption led him to scrap that plan. Museums have already expressed interest in showing that ten-panel UN work, and Hein envisions visitors to the show breathing on the walls around the canvases, expanding on the piece even further.

Children, adultsanybody can share their breath, Faurschou told artnet News. Thats really the power of the universal language of art, to take something as fundamental as our breath, that we all know, and link it to something as complicated and complex as climate change.

Jeppe Hein: Breathe With Me is being created in Central Park at 72nd Street and Center Road (between Sheep Meadow and the Naumburg Bandshell) in New York, September 2527, 2019, 11 a.m.6 p.m. The UN version is on viewat the United Nations Headquarters, New York, September 21October 5, 2019.

Jeppe Hein: I am With You is on view at 303 Gallery, 555 West 21st Street, New York, September 12October 19, 2019.

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Were All Breathing the Same Air: How Jeppe Heins Participatory Art Project United Schoolchildren and Heads of State During Climate Week - artnet News

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