EATING According to art historian Rochelle Steiner, Tiravanija's work "is fundamentally about bringing people together." In one of his best-known series, beginning with
pad thai (1990), at the Paula Allen Gallery in New York, he rejected traditional art objects altogether and instead cooked and served food for exhibition visitors. Tiravanija's work as well helped him gain his first solo exhibition in SoHo, reusing the titled for his first exhibition work called Untitled(free/still), letting participants interact within each other as they were served pad Thai curry, wanting his viewers to not only interact with each other as they were in the exhibition, but as well wanting them to be comforted by food with having everyone be served the same thing. Tiravanija later recreated the installation in 2007 at the
David Zwirner Gallery in Chelsea using the original elements and renaming the work
Untitled (free still). In 1995 he presented a similar untitled work at the
Carnegie International exhibition at the
Carnegie Museum of Art, where he included wall text that presented written instructions for cooking South-east Asian green curry, which was then prepared for visitors. Tiravanija’s work has been widely discussed in relation to deeply understanding social experience rather than material objects. His installations often require participation, conversation, and shared activity, positioning the viewer as an active contributor rather than a passive observer. By focusing on people gathering, eating, and interacting, his work challenges traditional distinctions between artist and audience. Critics have noted that these projects foreground everyday actions as meaningful artistic gestures, emphasizing the role of community and human connection in contemporary art.
Living Other exhibitions are also based on interaction and exchange among participants. Some viewers, like the students who lived in
Untitled 1999, a recreation of Tiravanija's East Village apartment, actually moved in for the duration of an exhibition. A 2005 solo show at
Serpentine Gallery, London, featured two new, full-scale replicas of this apartment, complete with kitchen, bath, and bedroom. In other projects, he has bricked up the entrance to gallery spaces, rendering them impenetrable for the duration of the respective exhibition. Tiravanija painted the words " Ne Travaillez Jamais" on the wall, a phrase lifted from the May 1968, protest riots in Paris. Since the early 1990s, Tiravanija has published multiples in the form of backpacks, cooking utensils, and maps as part of his practice. These commonplace objects used for cooking or camping serve today as memories of the artist's earlier projects and also stimulate new interactions, whether physical or purely in the imagination. In
Untitled 2008–2011 (the map of the land of feeling), Tiravanija presents a visual chronology of his life and work between 1988 and 2008, as told through the pages of his expansive passport. In 1997 Tiravanija began an engagement with modernist architecture when he installed in the
Museum of Modern Art's sculpture garden
Untitled: 1997 (Glass House), a child-size version of
Philip Johnson's
Glass House (1949). Similarly,
untitled 2002 (he promised) is an arena of activities ranging from DJ sessions to film screenings within a chrome and steel structure inspired by
Rudolf M. Schindler's
Kings Road House (1922) in West Hollywood. For
Asile Flottant (2010), he constructed a sketch of
Le Corbusier’s boat of the same name and inserted a section of it into a gallery.
Le Corbusier’s barge was designed for the
Salvation Army literally as a floating asylum meant to provide temporary overnight shelter for vagrants wandering the streets of Paris; Tiravanija’s barge, constructed in
Chiang Mai, was to serve as a pavilion that houses both political T-shirts designed by the artist, and others that have been collected from all over the world. In 2004 the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in
New York honoured Tiravanija with the
Hugo Boss Prize and presented an exhibition of his work, which had more overtly political tones. Featured in this exhibition,
Untitled 2005 (The Air Between the Chain-Link Fence and the Broken Bicycle Wheel) was an installation in which the artist addressed governmental control of popular media by installing a low-tech pirate television station within the museum, using a simple metal antenna and cables as broadcasting equipment, accompanied by a small wooden structure housing a television set and chairs. On the gallery walls Tiravanija featured the text of the US Constitution’s First Amendment (advocating freedom of speech), a history of radio and television communication in America, and simple directions for constructing low-tech broadcasting equipment. Tiravanija’s support of free speech is conveyed by his choice to broadcast the low-budget film
Punishment Park (1971), a documentary on the suppression of Vietnam War protests. Alongside
Hans Ulrich Obrist and
Philippe Parreno, Tiravanija staged the opera
Il Tempo del postino (‘Postman Time’) with the participation of a number of leading contemporary visual artists, first unveiled at the Manchester International Festival in 2007 and later at
Art Basel fair in an expanded form in 2009. "It is not what you see that is important but what takes place between people."
Film Tiravanija released
Chew the Fat in 2008. The work presents filmic portraits of twelve artists, all chosen by Tiravanija, that belong to the same generation as him, that rose to critical attention in the 1990s. All good friends, they rose to international success. Relating to the name, they create a relaxed situation where conversation flows naturally, with personal issues arising to do with work and career. It premiered as part of the exhibition "theanyspacewhatever" at the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. Tiravanija's second feature film,
Lung Neaw Visits His Neighbours was released in 2011. The film was shown at the
Orizzonti section of the
68th Venice International Film Festival. The documentary features a retired farmer that lives in a tranquil village in
Chiang Mai, far from the recent political turmoil in
Bangkok. At a moment when many people are demanding equality, opportunity, and democracy, we see in Lung Neaw an existence marked by compassion for his environment and his fellow villagers. The film offers a contemplative look at one man's humble dialogue with his surroundings. ==Other activities==