Regen Projects is pleased to present A-Z Personal Uniforms: Third Decade, a series of 48 garments designed and worn by Andrea Zittel between 2013 and 2023. This is the artist’s eighth solo exhibition at the gallery.
A-Z Personal Uniforms is one of Zittel’s longest standing experiments. She began the project in 1991 to liberate herself from the need to make choices about what to wear by voluntarily adhering to a set of constraints. Each uniform is worn exclusively throughout the season for which it is made. When Zittel initiated the project, she designed her uniforms for a two-season year (spring/summer and fall/winter). However, after relocating from New York City to California’s High Desert in 2000, she began making uniforms for each three-month season to comply with the region’s greater variations in weather. Zittel has produced three complete collections of uniforms grouped by the decade in which they were made and worn: 1991–2003, 2003–2013, and 2013–2023. The first decade is in the collection of the Schaulager, Münchenstein.
Over the past 35 years, Zittel’s oeuvre has encompassed sculpture, drawing, installation, design, and textiles. From the beginning, she has used the “arena of [her] day-to-day life to develop and test prototypes for living structures and situations.” Her practice is one in which spaces, objects, and the artist’s actions intertwine to investigate alternative modes of social and cultural participation. A-Z Personal Uniforms is one ongoing experiment in an ever-evolving series of interventions that powerfully “illuminate how we attribute significance to chosen structures or ways of life, and how arbitrary any choice of structure can be.” Multiple discrete projects by Zittel have coalesced into “single cohesive living situations” that include A-Z West, the artist’s “live/work residence,” and High Desert Test Sites, a nonprofit arts organization she co-founded near Joshua Tree, CA, in 2002.