The installation artist from Mexico is the 16th winner of the CHF100,000 ($106,000) prize, awarded annually by the Museum Haus Konstruktiv, where Ortega will hold a solo exhibition next year.
The jury was particularly impressed by how Ortega’s method “always combines the large-scale gesture with a subtle feeling for the poetics of the everyday”, Museum Haus Konstruktiv wroteExternal link on Wednesday.
Ortega, from Mexico City, was born in 1967, and worked as a political cartoonist before embarking on an art career. In 2003, he gained attention at the 50th Venice Biennale with “Cosmic Thing” – a fully dismantled Volkswagen Beetle whose individual parts were suspended from the ceiling, giving the impression of a technical diagram of the car hanging in space.
Following this, the Museum writes, Ortega’s installations have tended to be made from everyday products, but which are stacked, twisted, or dismantled, in a practice that “consistently raises questions about the historical, political and economic conditions of their production in a global context”.
Ortega has also worked in the mediums of sculpture, photography, film, and performance art.
The award is divided into a CHF20,000 prize and CHF80,000 of funding to organise a solo exhibition in the Museum Haus Konstruktiv, which will begin on October 26, 2023. Last year’s winner of the prize, and the current exhibitor, is Kapwani Kiwanga.
Basel’s Fine Arts Museum previously held a solo exhibition of Ortega’s work in 2004.
More
More
Kapwani Kiwanga wins Zurich Art Prize
This content was published on
French-Canadian artist Kapwani Kiwanga has been awarded the 15th Zurich Arts Prize.
Should Switzerland take measures to support its struggling industries?
Industrial policies are back in fashion, not only in the United States but also in the EU. Should Switzerland, where various industries are struggling, draw inspiration from such policies?
Switzerland increasingly a target for people smuggling and trafficking
This content was published on
Switzerland is increasingly being targeted by organized crime. This also applies to commercial people smuggling, the fastest growing criminal market in Europe.
Swiss forests better equipped against storms 25 years after Lothar
This content was published on
Twenty-five years ago, Hurricane Lothar toppled trees like dominoes in Switzerland. Forests today are better prepared to cope with such an exceptional event, say experts.
This content was published on
The Locarno Film Festival is considering moving from the beginning of August to the second half of July for its 80th edition in 2027.
Council of Europe head Alain Berset visits Georgia
This content was published on
The Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Alain Berset, is visiting Georgia, which has been rocked by a political crisis, from Wednesday.
Swiss politician who shot at Jesus faces criminal proceedings
This content was published on
The Zurich public prosecutor's office has opened criminal proceedings against politician Sanija Ameti. It is investigating whether she disrupted freedom of religion and worship.
Switzerland must be able to control immigration, says head of business federation
This content was published on
Switzerland must be able to control immigration itself if it "exceeds the tolerable limits", says Christoph Mäder, president of Economiesuisse, the Swiss Business Federation.
This content was published on
The film Reinas by Klaudia Reynicke, a Swiss-Peruvian-Spanish co-production, has missed out on an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Film.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
Read more
More
Theatre director Milo Rau wins Swiss culture prize
This content was published on
The St Gallen Cultural Foundation has awarded a special prize to Milo Rau, the Swiss theatre director, writer and filmmaker.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.