Sidi Vanetti

aka ertdfgcvb

Swiss

1975

Andreas Gysin and Sidi Vanetti are a Swiss artist duo whose collaborative work explores the creative possibilities of existing hardware through code, design, and visual experimentation. Without altering the original form of their materials, they use recycled displays and technological components to create installations that reimagine everyday objects as dynamic visual systems.

Full Bio

Sidi Vanetti was born in 1975 in Ticino, Switzerland, where he is also based. He is a designer and artist whose work combines conceptual rigor with a playful approach to visual systems. Alongside his studio practice, he has developed editorial projects, interactive installations, and curated exhibitions. Together, they form a Swiss artist duo whose collaborative work connects visual communication, architecture, and technology.

Andreas Gysin and Vanetti have collaborated on design and research projects since 2000, often without a fixed purpose. They produce temporary and permanent installations for museums and public spaces. In many of their recent works, the duo explores images and patterns using the typographic geometries of multipurpose displays. Their approach is characterized by an intention not to alter the structure or visual organization of the chosen hardware; they work with what already exists. Within these constraints, they search for infinite visual permutations. Using only prevailing forms, Gysin and Vanetti create images, animations, and patterns.

Their installations actively engage with public and museum spaces, encouraging viewers to see everyday technological objects in a new light and to reconsider their relationship with these familiar systems. Their works have been exhibited internationally at the Museum of Digital Art in Zürich, Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival in Johannesburg, Verse in London, and MUD Gallery in Shanghai. Their works are held in public and private collections including the Haus für Elektronische Künste in Basel, the Museum für Gestaltung in Zürich, and the Museo d’Arte della Svizzera italiana in Lugano.