Invited to take part in the group exhibition Peace that looked at contemporary artistic ideas of peace, Tracy & Edwin designed and installed a temporary public studio. From this base a wool text blanket developed, comments and extracts of conversations about ideas of peace today generated by visitors and sent by email and fax were stitched onto the wool surface.

At the end of the project and after it had been through a needle-punch machining process, the blanket was used by the people whose contributions were included in it, finally becoming part of the Migros Museum collection.

Due to the birth of their son Erasmus, Tracy & Edwin’s presence was intermittent, the large black and white photo of them as John and Yoko acting as their surrogate. Also on display was their poster, based on the poster John Lennon & Yoko Ono produced for their peace campaign in the early seventies: WAR IS OVER! If you want it, Love and Peace from John and Yoko.

John & Yoko’s campaign for world peace was not only an expression of real social and political concern but was also an early and good example of public art. Full of utopian naïvety and self-promotion, it didn’t bring world peace but the photographs of John & Yoko in bed have made it into our history books. As Gavin Brown said in the Peace exhibition catalogue ‘Of any contemporary figure no one is more identified in the public mind with vague notions of peace than John Lennon’.

In 2000, the year of the Zürich project, these nostalgic images had no relationship with actual political reality. A call for peace was a seemingly meaningless gesture from the past.

There was no global peace movement and the many regional wars had little impact on our lives in the so-called West. September 11th changed all that and when the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were fought, a peace movement rose from its grave.

The curators, Gianni Jetzer and Rein Wolfs, said of the exhibition, “‘Peace’ explores the chances for peace on Earth on an artistic level. ‘Peace’ is seen as a metaphor of reality, as an ironic challenge and a paradigmatic gesture. A dozen international artists took part part in ‘Peace’.

The exhibition was accompanied by a peaceful supporting programme and a well illustrated catalogue with texts by a variety authors.

* Participating artists; Carlos Amorales, Julie Becker, Daniele Buetti, Urs Fischer, Ceal Floyer, Douglas Gordon, Nic Hess, Elke Krystufek, Olaf Nicolai, Bob and Roberta Smith, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Piotr Uklanski, Tracy Mackenna & Edwin Janssen.