PURPLE PATH / LÖßNITZ, GERMANY
ULI AIGNER @ CHEMNITZ 2025 - EUROPEAN CAPITAL OF CULTURE
OPENING OF THE PURPLE PATH - ART AND SCULPTURE TRAIL AND THE ONE MILLION MONUMENTAL PORCELAIN VESSELS IN LÖßNITZ
Dear contemporaries,
The time has come: the PURPLE PATH opens in full length!
Happy to see you there!
Opening Purple Path: Friday, April 11th, 2025
Admission: 9.30 am
Start: 10 am
Location: Alte Baumwolle Flöha
Seeberstrasse, 09557 Flöha
www.chemnitz2025.de
Lecture by Uli Aigner: Sunday, April 13th, 2025, 4pm
Location: Bürgerhaus 1. OG
Marktplatz 13, 08294 Lößnitz
Followed by a guided tour of the two monumental porcelain vessels on the grounds of the former steam brewery Schwartz, Niedergraben 11, 08294 Lößnitz
www.one-million.world
ONE MILLION BY ULI AIGNER - ITEM 3501 & 3502
The artist Uli Aigner, born in Austria in 1965 and now living in Berlin, began her magnum opus One Million in 2014, creating it with just her bare hands and a potter’s wheel. The artist, who completed a pottery apprenticeship and then studied product and digital image design, collaborates with others and draws on dialogue to create a wide variety of porcelain vessels, ranging in size from tiny to gigantic. Aigner carves a sequential number into the moist clay on each of her Items, 8000 of which have been produced so far, and fires the porcelain with a transparent glaze. Once complete, each piece is added to the overall project. A world map on the artist’s website shows the locations of her exhibits, and the ever-changing designs are listed in a global archive.
These two monumental pieces from the series, numbered 3501 and 3502, were created in 2019 in collaboration with potters in Jingdezhen, China – the world capital of porcelain and formerly the hub of production for the legendary Ming dynasty. Weighing around 800 kilograms, Item 3502 was unable to withstand the forces of nature and collapsed during the manufacturing process. The apparently broken item was included by Aigner alongside its “intact” counterpart in the One Million series, representing different forms of existence under her “Porcelain Code”.
Lößnitz followed the example of the mining towns of Schneeberg and Aue-Bad Schlema. The entrepreneurial Schnorr family from Schneeberg mined cobalt as early as the seventeenth century. The St. Andreas Zeche Weiße Erde (St. Andrew’s White Earth Mine), a source of kaolin (Sprungmarke: Cluster 3), the raw material for the “white gold” of porcelain, followed in 1708. Until this point, the ruling houses of Europe had imported fine porcelain from China, but in 1710, the first Meissen porcelain factory was established. The Erzgebirge provided the base material for Meissen porcelain (Sprungmarke: Cluster 3), which was then decorated in blue, in line with the Chinese fashion.
Aigner chose Lößnitz as the location for the monumental Items 3051 and 3502, which were moulded in China, thus completing a circle.
Text: Ulrike Pennewitz