www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

Turn to tidiness elevates a star

Updated: 2013-04-07 07:45

By Penelope Green(The New York Times)

  Print Mail Large Medium  Small

Turn to tidiness elevates a star

Turn to tidiness elevates a star

A comedian in Switzerland, Ursus Wehrli is also known for his picture books on "tidying up." His third one is now being released in the United States. Images from the book, top. Andrea Wyner for The New York Times

ZURICH - Ursus Wehrli is famous in his country for being half of the anarchic comic duo Ursus & Nadeschkin, but he has lately accrued another sort of fame as an author with a particularly fastidious worldview. So it may come as a bit of disappointment to certain design blog fans to learn that Mr. Wehrli is not exactly a neatnik or in any way obsessive or compulsive.

Mr. Wehrli's first two picture books, "Tidying Up Art" and its sequel, "Tidying Up More Art," present a simple but satisfying sight gag, over and over, in which he "tidies up" modern masters like Klee and Picasso, Pollock and Haring in a series of "before" and "after" photos. In the "afters," Mr. Wehrli, 44, deconstructs a painting's components (body parts, say, in a Picasso, or squares in a Klee) and then stacks them in neat, color-specific rows. Flummoxed by Pollock, he offers just cans of paint. The first "Tidy" book, published in 2002, sold half a million copies in Europe. (Last year, he was invited by the Swiss Post to tidy up a stamp.)

And out now in the United States is Mr. Wehrli's third book, "The Art of Clean Up: Life Made Neat and Tidy." More than 100,000 copies of the German edition, published in late 2011, have already sold.

Many have wondered, what does this guy's house look like? After all, his new book tackles more quotidian subjects than fine art: laundry drying on a clothesline is re-sorted by color; a bowl of sliced fruit in a polka-dot bowl is organized into its parts, polka dots included.

It turns out that Mr. Wehrli's home, a six-room duplex apartment in Zurich West, is neither particularly neat nor slovenly, occupying instead a recognizable middle ground. Bright, spare and slightly industrial, it is distinctive in the way many European homes are to American eyes: there is a lot less stuff.

A bright yellow hammock bisects the living room at its midpoint. A shaggy turquoise footstool sits on a bright orange rug like an exclamation point. There is not much artwork, either.

Mr. Wehrli, a lanky former juggler, lives with his 6-year-old son and his partner of 16 years, Brigitta Schrepfer, 46, in a cooperative apartment complex in an old industrial area that is something of a model for communal living and collaborative consumption.

Juggling was a career choice he made because it gave him autonomy. Wasn't his mother worried?

"She worried because I used to practice in the kitchen and I broke a lot of dishes," he said.

It was his mother who suggested that Mr. Wehrli attend a circus workshop in Germany 25 years ago. That's where he met Nadja Sieger. The workshop was boring and chaotic, he said, and they bonded over its failures. In the beginning, their act was mostly juggling, music and unicycling.

He met Ms. Schrepfer, a dancer, when he and Ms. Sieger traveled to New York in the late '90s to perform at an arts center and he rented a room in an apartment that Ms. Schrepfer had once rented. He was already "a little bit in love," he said, when he brought back a bag of clothing she had left behind in New York. Unbeknown to him, "I meant to leave it behind," Ms. Schrepfer said. "So I threw the bag in the trash the moment he handed it to me."

The complex where they have lived since 2001 is not architecturally marvelous, but its social and environmental workings make it lovely. Residents collaborate on maintenance projects, group dinners, film nights and a video library. Residents pay a "spirit fee" of 10 to 60 francs, or $10 to $60, a month, which goes to supporting low-income tenants and environmental projects like composting.

In his living room, Mr. Wehrli mused on cultural stereotypes, like the orderliness of the Swiss.

"We live in a small country, much of which is covered in mountain ranges," he said. "We constantly have to find ways around those mountains. We have to arrange all the time. You learn immediately you have to arrange with others; you have to have rules. You don't have many arrogant Swiss people: the grossenwahn, the big person who thinks too much of himself. We don't have stars, in sports or music or art, except Roger Federer and he is very shy."

Yet it could be argued that Mr. Wehrli and Ms. Sieger are stars. The pair have won nearly every major theater award their country gives out, and a few outside of it. He performs about 100 sold-out shows each year.

As a comedian, Mr. Wehrli said, he is devoted to upending expectations. "Comedians take a neat situation and turn it into a mess," he said. "And in my books I do the same thing, but it's the other way around. I like to mess around with mess. A mess is only a mess because someone tells you it is."

The New York Times

(China Daily 04/07/2013 page12)

主站蜘蛛池模板: 欧美区一区 | 91小视频在线观看免费版高清 | 欧美日韩亚洲v在线观看 | 久久www免费人成_看片高清 | 久久精品国产三级不卡 | 91视频免费播放 | 高跟丝袜美女一级毛片 | 114一级毛片免费 | 日本成人在线免费观看 | 成人爽a毛片在线视频 | 国产欧美日韩一区二区三区 | 二区久久国产乱子伦免费精品 | 国产特级全黄一级毛片不卡 | 在线亚洲观看 | 亚洲一区二区三区香蕉 | 久久er热在这里只有精品85 | 国产精品永久免费视频观看 | 99久久精品国产国产毛片 | 99r8这是只有精品视频9 | 成人免费视频国产 | 一区二区三区四区视频 | 亚洲欧美日韩精品久久亚洲区色播 | 亚洲第一欧美 | 99视频在线精品 | 精品国产一区二区三区www | 手机在线黄色网址 | 亚洲欧美成人综合久久久 | 亚洲精品日韩专区在线观看 | 亚洲欧美另类日本久久影院 | 久久久久女人精品毛片九一 | 国产精品成人影院 | 超级碰碰碰在线观看 | 亚洲第一免费网站 | 亚洲免费在线视频观看 | 国产成人禁片免费观看视频 | 日本欧美一区二区 | 精品国产精品 | 免费看美女无遮掩的软件 | 免费五级在线观看日本片 | 69凹凸国产成人精品视频 | 99精品久久久久久久免费看蜜月 |