Sculptural intervention by Swiss art collective Les Innombrables at the Messeplatz in Basel during Art Basel 2026.
Les Innombrables are known since the 1990s for “seizing” or “found” realities/performances/installations in art-fair contexts, like their past works at Frieze LA 2019, Art Basel Miami, Venice Biennale, etc..
Les Innombrables: Very Welcome. Messeplatz, Basel (Switzerland), June 21, 2026.
Official description:
In the transient agora of Messeplatz during Art Basel 2026, the Swiss collective Les Innombrables—longtime practitioners of the objet trouvé reconfigured as institutional critique—unfolds a sculptural intervention that operates at the threshold of visibility and occlusion. Titled implicitly through its silent occupation (echoing their recurring “found performance” lexicon), this ensemble of monumental conical forms, sheathed in taut, reflective fabric, asserts itself as both barrier and beacon within the circulatory logic of the fair’s exterior precinct.
These are not mere bollards writ large, though they formally paraphrase the prosaic urban furniture of crowd control and vehicular restraint. Instead, Les Innombrables have enacted a precise détournement: the industrial vernacular of temporary demarcation—those ubiquitous traffic cones and protective shrouds—is elevated into a minimalist taxonomy of absence. The silvery-gray drapery, pulled taut yet subtly yielding to gravity, evokes a spectral monumentality reminiscent of Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s wrappings, yet stripped of spectacle and infused with a cooler, more Lacanian unease. Here, the covered form gestures toward the psychoanalytic objet petit a—the thing that both promises and withholds plenitude—while simultaneously indexing the covered artworks inside the halls: the veiled commodities of the art market, shrouded in anticipation or aftermath.
Positioned along the paved expanse, these sentinels disrupt the pedestrian flow without fully arresting it. Visitors navigate around their flared bases, their bodies momentarily refracted in the metallic sheen, enacting a choreography of avoidance and attraction. The intervention thus performs a phenomenology of the perimeter: in the heart of Basel’s Messeplatz, where Herzog & de Meuron’s architecture frames the spectacle of global capital, Les Innombrables insert a quiet meditation on boundaries—between public and proprietary, between the ephemeral fair and the enduring city, between what is displayed and what remains under wraps. The cones stand as mute witnesses to the circulatory economy of attention, their conical geometry funneling the gaze downward even as their anonymity invites projection upward toward the absent apex.
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