Do You Hear the Rumble?: Daniela Edburg

12 February - 29 March 2025
Overview

Contemplate like a mountain, weep like a glacier, roar like a volcano, rest like the rolling hills.

– Daniela Edburg

 

Fabienne Levy Gallery is pleased to present the second exhibition of Daniela Edburg, “Do You Hear the Rumble?”, on view in its two venues in Geneva and Lausanne. The show explores the power of change in times of turmoil.

 

Daniela Edburg’s first solo exhibition in 2020, “Topographies of Transformation”, explored the heart-breaking and rapid deterioration of the world’s glaciers, drawing a parallel with the autoimmune disease she suffers from. In this new exhibition, the focus shifts from the interplay between nature and body to emotional and psychological change. Volcanoes do not disappear- they wake up and explode. We are living in a time of political and social unrest, where human politics have repercussions on our natural environment. Amid the rumble and chaos, we find ourselves in a process of transformation. In this way, Daniela Edburg’s work has evolved from an exploration of deterioration and loss to an investigation of chaos and change.


A river of lava fills the first room, consisting of crocheted rugs made by hand: one by a community of women in San Miguel de Allende in Mexico, the artist’s home, and one made in Switzerland by volunteers during the artist’s residency in Lausanne prior to the show. This collaborative and cross-cultural approach is central to Daniela Edburg’s practice. In this exhibition, Mexican volcanoes are presented under bell jars like precious jewels: Paricutín, Ceboruco, Citlaltépetl, Popocatépetl… Like blueprints, the works bear the names of the volcanoes they depict. These unpredictable and devastating forces of nature are represented here in miniature versions carved in wood, like precious heirlooms safely kept under glass. Each has a specific topography and is part of the Mexican natural and cultural landscape. More than landmarks, volcanoes are deeply interwoven into the Mexican cultural identity.

 

The show also revisits Edburg’s traditional technique of felt needling used for her glaciers series. The “Night Volcanoes” series depicts Icelandic volcanoes in eruption, their fumes escaping their frames. Inspired by the Jungian archetype of the volcano—both a symbol of transformation and a metaphor for the human mind—Daniela Edburg draws from Carl Jung’s observation: “One always tends to blame external circumstances, but nothing would explode in us if it were not there beforehand [...] we are constantly living on the edge of a volcano, and there is, so far as we know, no way of protecting ourselves from a possible outburst that will destroy everybody within reach.”

 

The word “psyche” in ancient Greek means “butterfly” or “soul”, relating to the belief that human souls became butterflies while searching for a new reincarnation. Both volcanoes and butterflies demonstrate that one must lose one’s form completely to reform as a new being. This show highlights the regenerative power inherent in destruction, emphasizing its necessity for growth and change.

 

Geneva - Press Release
Genève - Communiqué de presse

 

Lausanne - Press Release
Lausanne - Communiqué de presse

Works
  • Daniela Edburg, Volcan de Fuego, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Volcan de Fuego, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Meradalir, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Meradalir, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Geldingadalur, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Geldingadalur, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Ceboruco, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Ceboruco, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Uncomfortable Tea Set, 2022
    Daniela Edburg, Uncomfortable Tea Set, 2022
  • Daniela Edburg, Fagradalsfjall, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Fagradalsfjall, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Volcán, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Volcán, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Eyjafjallajökul, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Eyjafjallajökul, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Uncomfortable Dinnerware, 2022
    Daniela Edburg, Uncomfortable Dinnerware, 2022
  • Daniela Edburg, Cerrito, 2025
    Daniela Edburg, Cerrito, 2025
  • Daniela Edburg, The Reader, 2025
    Daniela Edburg, The Reader, 2025
  • Daniela Edburg, The Writer, 2025
    Daniela Edburg, The Writer, 2025
  • Daniela Edburg, Eyjafjallajökul, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Eyjafjallajökul, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Popocatepetl, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Popocatepetl, 2024
  • Daniela Edburg, Litli Hrutur, 2024
    Daniela Edburg, Litli Hrutur, 2024
Installation Views