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    sculpture

    June 2013

    Vol. 32 No.5

    A publication of theInternational Sculpture Centerwww.sculpture.org

    Meeson Pae Yang

    Doris Salcedo

    Nari Ward

    http://www.sculpture.org/http://www.sculpture.org/
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    One of the many exciting things happening at the International Sculpture

    Center is the growing interest in chapter groups. This is a burgeoningsource of strength for the ISC, providing a network through which artists

    and art enthusiasts can engage and collaborate at a regional level.

    Chicago Sculpture International (CSI) and Texas Sculpture Group (TSG)

    are current ISC chapter groups, and there is interest in new chapters

    around the world. CSI promotes a supportive environment for sculp-

    ture and sculptors in the Chicago area through exhibitions and public

    forums. The Chicago Sculpture International Outdoor Exhibition,

    shown in the citys lakefront parks, has been a highlight of the groups

    achievements.

    TSG supports and promotes sculptors working in Texas through net-

    working, discussions, a Web presence, publications, and exhibitions.

    Among the many exhibitions featuring works by TSG members is Art in

    the Garden 2013 hosted by the San Antonio Botanical Garden and Blue

    Star Contemporary Art Museum. This year-long event features sculptures

    by members of TSG and CSI.

    Both ISC chapter groups contribute in numerous ways to the expansion

    and awareness of contemporary sculpture in their geographic areas.

    I encourage you to read more about these groups on page 80 of this

    issue.

    Finally, if you are still planning a summer vacation, I would like to

    suggest visiting one of the many wonderful sculpture parks or gardens

    in the U.S. and around the world. Sculpture parks and gardens have

    become increasingly popular destinations for art and nature lovers alike.

    Please check out the must-see parks and gardens listed in this issue.

    These internationally acclaimed venues, where stunning sculpturesrise from the ground like the impressive trees that surround them, are

    some of the best places to experience the art of nature and the art

    of culture merging together. In addition, the ISC Sculpture Parks and

    Gardens Destination Directory on the ISC Web site makes it easy to search for parks and gardens all over the world

    and find all the information you need.

    Have a wonderful summer discovering the world of sculpture.

    Marc LeBaron

    Chairman, ISC Board of Trustees

    From the Chairman

    4 Sculpture 32.5

    ISC Board of Trustees

    Chairman:Marc LeBaron, Lincoln, NE

    Chakaia Booker, New York, NY

    Robert Edwards, Naples, FL

    Jeff Fleming, Des Moines, IA

    Ralfonso Gschwend, Switzerland

    Carla Hanzal, Charlotte, NC

    Paul Hubbard, Philadelphia, PA

    Ree Kaneko, Omaha, NE

    Gertrud Kohler-Aeschlimann, Switzerland

    Mark Lyman, Sawyer, MI

    Creighton Michael, Mt. Kisco, NY

    Deedee Morrison, Birmingham, AL

    Prescott Muir, Salt Lake City, UT

    George W. Neubert, Brownville, NE

    Andrew Rogers, AustraliaF. Douglass Schatz, Potsdam, NY

    Boaz Vaadia, New York, NY

    Philipp von Matt, Germany

    Chairmen Emeriti: Robert Duncan, Lincoln, NE

    John Henry, Chattanooga, TN

    Peter Hobart, Italy

    Josh Kanter, Salt Lake City, UT

    Robert Vogele, Hinsdale, IL

    Founder:Elden Tefft, Lawrence, KS

    Lifetime Achievement in

    Contemporary Sculpture Recipients

    Magdalena Abakanowicz

    Fletcher Benton

    Fernando Botero

    Louise Bourgeois

    Anthony Caro

    Elizabeth Catlett

    John Chamberlain

    Eduardo Chillida

    Christo & Jeanne-Claude

    Mark di Suvero

    Richard HuntPhillip King

    William King

    Manuel Neri

    Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen

    Nam June Paik

    Arnaldo Pomodoro

    Gi Pomodoro

    Robert Rauschenberg

    George Rickey

    George Segal

    Kenneth Snelson

    Frank Stella

    William Tucker

    __

    http://www.sculpture.org/http://www.sculpture.org/http://www.sculpture.org/http://www.sculpture.org/http://www.sculpture.org/
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    Departments

    14 Itinerary

    18 Commissions

    20 Forum: Laumeier Sculpture Park and the

    Archaeology of Place

    by Daniel McGrath

    80 ISC News

    Reviews

    73 Richmond: Arlene Shechet

    74 Denver: Katie Caron

    75 Washington, DC: 40 under 40: Craft Futures

    76 New York: Hijo Nam

    77 Toronto: Evan Penny

    77 Tel Aviv: Guy Zagursky78 Aichi Prefecture, Japan: Noe Aoki

    79 Auckland, New Zealand: Summer of Sculpture

    On the Cover:Meeson Pae Yang, Geodes

    (detail), 2010. Silicone, cement, reflections,

    mirrored Plexiglas, and mylar, 10 x 35 x 6 ft.

    Photo: Gene Ogami, courtesy the artist.

    Features

    24 Myths of Fantastical Life: A Conversation with Meeson Pae Yang by Michal Amy

    32 The Life Through Time and Space: A Conversation with Tatsuo Miyajima by Karlyn De Jongh

    38 Paradise Lost: A Conversation with Anna Eyjlfsdttir by Robert Preece

    44 Life Might Prevail: Doris SalcedosPlegaria Muda by Laura Tansini

    50 Serendipity and Faith: A Conversation with Nari Ward by Jan Garden Castro

    50

    sculptureJun e 2013

    Vol. 32 No. 5

    A publication of the

    International Sculpture Center

    75

    Sculpture June 2013 5

    38

    44

    32

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    S C U L P T U R E M A G A Z I N E

    Editor Glenn Harper

    Managing Editor Twylene Moyer

    Editorial Assistants Elena Goukassian, Amanda Hickok

    Design Eileen Schramm visual communicationAdvertising Sales Manager Brenden OHanlon

    Contributing Editors Maria Carolina Baulo (BuenosAires), Roger Boyce (Christchurch), Susan Canning (NewYork), Marty Carlock (Boston), Jan Garden Castro (New

    York), Collette Chattopadhyay (Los Angeles), Ina Cole(London), Ana Finel Honigman (Berlin), John K. Grande(Montreal), Kay Itoi (Tokyo), Matthew Kangas (Seattle),

    Zoe Kosmidou (Athens), Angela Levine (Tel Aviv), BrianMcAvera (Belfast), Robert C. Morgan (New York), RobertPreece (Rotterdam), Brooke Kamin Rapaport (New

    York), Ken Scarlett (Melbourne), Peter Selz (Berkeley),Sarah Tanguy (Washington), Laura Tansini (Rome)

    Each issue ofSculptureis indexed in The Art Index and

    the Bibliography of the History of Art (BHA).

    isc

    Benefactors Circle ($100,000+)

    Atlantic Foundation

    Fletcher Benton

    Karen & Robert Duncan

    Grounds For Sculpture

    John HenryJ. Seward Johnson, Jr.

    Johnson Art & Education Foundation

    Ree & Jun Kaneko

    Joshua S. Kanter

    Kanter Family Foundation

    Gertrud & Heinz Kohler-Aeschlimann

    Marc LeBaron

    Lincoln Industries

    National Endowment for the Arts

    New Jersey State Council on the Arts

    Mary OShaughnessy

    I.A. OShaughnessy Foundation

    Estate of John A. Renna

    Jon & Mary Shirley Foundation

    Dr. & Mrs. Robert Slotkin

    Bernar Venet

    Chairmans Circle ($10,00049,999)

    Magdalena AbakanowiczAnonymous FoundationJanet BlockerBlue Star Contemporary Art Center

    Debra Cafaro & Terrance LivingstonSir Anthony CaroChelsea College of Art & DesignChicago Arts District/Podmajersky, Inc.Clinton Family FundRichard CohenLinda & Daniel CoopermanDavid DiamondJarvis & Constance Doctorow Family FoundationGeraldine R. Dodge FoundationLin EmeryFred EychanerCarole FeuermanBill FitzGibbonsAlan GibbsGibbs Farm

    Ralfonso GschwendDavid HandleyRichard HeinrichDaniel A. HendersonMichelle HobartPeter C. HobartJoyce & Seward Johnson FoundationKANEKOMary Ann KeelerKeeler FoundationPhillip KingWilliam KingAnne Kohs AssociatesNicola J. and Nanci J. Lanni FundCynthia Madden Leitner/Museum of Outdoor Arts

    Toby D. Lewis Philanthropic Fund

    Marlene & Sandy LouchheimMarlborough GalleryPatricia MeadowsCreighton Michael

    Barrie MowattManuel NeriNew Jersey Cultural TrustRalph OConnorFrances & Albert PaleyPatricia RenickPat Renick Gift FundHenry RichardsonMelody Sawyer RichardsonRuss RubertSalt Lake Art CenterCarol L. Sarosik & Shelley PadnosDoug SchatzMary Ellen ScherlJune & Paul Schorr, IIIJudith Shea

    Armando SilvaKenneth & Katherine SnelsonSTRETCHMark di SuveroTakahisa SuzukiAylin TahinciogluCynthia ThompsonSteinunn ThorarinsdottirTishman SpeyerBrian TuneUniversity of Nebraska Medical CenterUniversity of the Arts LondonRobert E. VogelePhilipp von MattGeorgia Welles

    Elizabeth Erdreich White

    Address all editorial correspondence to:

    Sculpture

    1633 Connecticut Avenue NW, 4th Floor

    Washington, DC 20009Phone: 202.234.0555, fax 202.234.2663E-mail:[email protected] On-Lineon the International

    Sculpture Center Web site:www.sculpture.org

    Advertising information

    E-mail

    I N T E R N AT I O N A L S C U L P T U R E C E N T E R C O N T E M P O R A R Y S C U L P T U R E C I R C L EThe International Sculpture Center is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization

    that provides programming and services supported by contributions, grants,

    sponsorships, and memberships.

    The ISC Board of Trustees gratefully acknowledges the generosity of our

    members and donors in our Contemporary Sculpture Circle: those who have

    contributed $350 and above.

    I N T E R N A T I O N A L S C U L P T U R E C E N T E R

    Executive Director Johannah HutchisonOffice Manager Denise Jester

    Executive Assistant Alyssa Brubaker

    Membership Manager Manju PhilipMembership Associate Kristy Cole

    Development Manager Candice Lombardi

    Web Manager Karin JervertConference and Events Manager Erin Gautsche

    Advertising Services Associate Jeannette Darr

    ISC Headquarters

    19 Fairgrounds Road, Suite B

    Hamilton, New Jersey 08619Phone: 609.689.1051, fax 609.689.1061

    E-mail:[email protected]

    Major Donors ($50,00099,999)

    Anonymous Foundation

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    Erik & Michele Christiansen

    Terry & Robert Edwards

    Doris & Donald Fisher

    Rob Fisher

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    Robert Mangold

    Fred & Lena Meijer

    Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park

    Pew Charitable Trust

    Arnaldo Pomodoro

    Walter Schatz

    William Tucker

    Boaz Vaadia

    Nadine Witkin, Estate of Isaac Witkin

    Mary & John Young

    ____________

    _________

    ____________

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    About the ISCThe International Sculpture Center is a member-supported, nonprofit organizationfounded in 1960 to champion the creation and understanding of sculpture andits unique and vital contribution to society. The mission of the ISC is to expand

    public understanding and appreciation of sculpture internationally, demonstratethe power of sculpture to educate and effect social change, engage artists andarts professionals in a dialogue to advance the art form, and promote a support-ive environment for sculpture and sculptors. The ISC values: our constituentsSculptors, Institutions, and Patrons; dialogueas the catalyst to innovation andunderstanding; educationas fundamental to personal, professional, and soci-etal growth; and communityas a place for encouragement and opportunity.

    MembershipISC membership includes subscriptions toSculptureand Insider; access toInternational Sculpture Conferences; free registration inPortfolio, the ISCson-line sculpture registry; and discounts on publications, supplies, and services.

    International Sculpture ConferencesThe ISCs International Sculpture Conferences gather sculpture enthusiastsfrom all over the world to network and dialogue about technical, aesthetic,and professional issues.

    SculptureMagazinePublished 10 times per year, Sculptureis dedicated to all forms of contemporarysculpture. The members edition includes the Insider newsletter, which containstimely information on professional opportunities for sculptors, as well as a list

    of recent public art commissions and announcements of members accomplish-ments.

    www.sculpture.orgThe ISCs award-winning Web siteis the most comprehensiveresource for information on sculpture. It featuresPortfolio, an on-line slideregistry and referral system providing detailed information about artists and theirwork to buyers and exhibitors; theSculpture Parks and Gardens Directory, withlistings of over 250 outdoor sculpture destinations;Opportunities, a membershipservice with commissions, jobs, and other professional listings; plus the ISCnewsletter and extensive information about the world of sculpture.

    Education Programs and Special EventsISC programs include the Outstanding Sculpture Educator Award, the OutstandingStudent Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Awards, and the LifetimeAchievement Award in Contemporary Sculpture and gala. Other special eventsinclude opportunities for viewing art and for meeting colleagues in the field.

    Directors Circle ($5,0009,999)

    The ISCs publicationsare supported in partby a grant from theNational Endowmentfor the Arts.

    This program is made possible in

    part by funds from the New JerseyState Council on the Arts/Departmentof State, a Partner Agency of theNational Endowment for the Arts. New Jersey Cultural Trust

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    Otto M. Budig Family FoundationLisa Colburn

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    ______

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    14 Sculpture 32.5

    BALL

    OU:PIERCEJACKSON,

    BROOKLYNMUSEUM

    /JOHNSON:FREDRIKN

    ILSENSTUDIO,2013,

    COURTESYBALLROOM

    MARFA/COOLQUITT:CO

    URTESYLISACOOLEY,NY

    Ballroom Marfa

    Marfa, TexasRashid Johnson

    Through July 7, 2013

    Johnsons installations, sculptures,

    photographs, and videos offer deep

    meditations on the phenomena that

    shape African American culture

    while questioning any uniformity

    in the black experience. Wading

    through dense thickets of reference

    and information, he blends personal

    and historically loaded objects

    (books, album covers, and shea

    butter) into complicated aggregates

    that defy taxonomy and confound

    collective identity. Beginning with

    the question, What would happen

    if Sun Ra, George Washington Carver,

    and Robert Smithson started acommunity together in the desert?

    New Growth playfully intertwines

    cosmology, escapism, and irrigation

    in order to redraw the past, present,

    and future of the desert around

    Marfa. Newly commissioned works

    include a large-scale sculpture and

    videoboth produced in situ

    as well as paintings, works in wood,

    and island-like installations.

    Tel: 432.729.3600

    Web site

    Blaffer Gallery, University of

    Houston

    Houston

    Andy Coolquitt

    Through August 24, 2013

    Scavenging the streets for remnants

    of human activity, Coolquitt trans-

    forms debris such as metal tubing,

    plastic lighters, empty bottles,

    drinking straws, and paper bags

    into humble monuments to transient

    existences and temporary encounters

    in public space. Though his materials

    are drawn from the exterior world,

    they also express an interior life that

    humanizes homelessness. Indivi-

    dual sculptures and groupings imply

    a sense of domesticity, whetherthrough association or function

    providing light, warmth, and other

    physical comforts. For his first solo

    museum exhibition, Coolquitt has

    recombined 60 discrete sculptures

    and tableaux into a new installation

    that reflects on the gallery as a codi-

    fied place of interaction for people

    and artworks. The show also includes

    a selection of somebody-mades

    and in-betweens, works that strad-

    dle the line between autonomoussculptures and unaltered appropria-

    tions. These quasi-artworks further

    complicate the relationship

    between creation and reception,

    artist and audience, blurring the

    boundaries of art and life.

    Tel: 713.743.2255

    Web site

    Brooklyn Museum

    Brooklyn

    Michael Ballou

    Through July 7, 2013

    For the eighth installment of the

    Raw/Cooked series, Ballou, a

    Williamsburg-based multimedia

    artist whose work incorporates sculp-

    ture, performance, and collaboration,has created three interconnected

    installations exploring the behavior

    and inner lives of animals.Dog Years,

    a monumental construction of more

    than 30 sculptures modeled on ani-

    mals of his acquaintance, occupies

    the Decorative Arts galleries.Go-Go

    enlivens the fifth-floor elevator lobby

    with a mobile puppet suspended

    from the ceiling, ambient music, and

    the play of projected light and shad-

    ows. AndPencil Holdersresponds tothe Luce Visible Storage/Study Cen-

    ter. Drawn to theWunderkammer-

    quality of this treasure house, Ballou

    added several of his own ceramic

    sculptures, accompanied by six fic-

    tional contributions by authors

    Stephanie Barber, David Brody, James

    Hannaham, Kurt Hoffman, Helen

    Phillips, and Matthew Sharpe (all

    accessible by QR code).

    Tel: 718.638.5000

    Web site

    itinerary

    Left: Michael Ballou, detail of work

    in progress. Above: Rashid Johnson,

    installation view of New Growth.

    Right: Andy Coolquitt, chair w/

    paintings.

    http://www.ballroommarfa.org/http://www.class.uh.edu/blafferhttp://www.brooklynmuseum.org/http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/http://www.class.uh.edu/blafferhttp://www.ballroommarfa.org/
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    Sculpture June 2013 15

    Frederik Meijer Gardens and

    Sculpture Park

    Grand Rapids

    Zhang Huan

    Through August 25, 2013

    Zhang Huan began his career withcontroversial performances that

    tested his physical endurance and

    pushed the limits of acceptability in

    post-Tiananmen China. After moving

    to New York in 1998, he staged

    photographs as performances and

    enacted large-scale events, often

    involving scores of volunteers.

    Several years ago, his work took

    another turn when he established

    a studio in a former Shanghai gar-

    ment factory and began to producemonumental sculptures. These sug-

    gestive and forceful works, made

    from bronze, incense ash, and found

    materials from the Chinese country-

    side, reflect on the historical legacy

    of Buddhism and its place in the

    modern world. Looking East, Facing

    West follows his personal journey

    through photographic and sculptural

    works from the last 15 years.

    Tel: 888.957.1580

    Web site

    Gemeentemuseum

    The Hague

    Yes Naturally

    Through August 16, 2013

    Yes Naturally raises the question

    of what is natural. Are human beingsthe only ones with a say, or do ani-

    mals, plants, and inanimate objects

    also have a role to play? From

    clichd images of romantic land-

    scapes to the inescapable facts

    of environmental degradation, this

    large-scale exhibition offers a tour

    of the natural world from a variety of

    unusual perspectives. Works by more

    than 80 artists, including Francis Als,

    Jimmie Durham, Olafur Eliasson,

    Fischli & Weiss, Natalie Jeremijenko,Marjetica Potrc, Atelier van Lieshout,

    Zeger Reyers, Superflex, and Ai

    Weiwei, establish surprising partner-

    ships of humanity, nature, and tech-

    nology. The results are both liberat-

    ing and hilarious: you can design

    your own pet and harvest th e ci ty;

    your smartphone is your memory,

    Facebook your habitat, and the

    Internet the new biotope. In keeping

    with its extra-human spirit, Yes

    Naturally moves beyond the walls

    of culture, spreading outdoors to the

    museum grounds, the dune forest,

    and into the city, with urban wildlife

    safaris, performances, workshops,

    and public programs, supplemented

    by social media and on-line forums.

    Tel: + 31 (0) 70 3381111

    Web site

    Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg

    Wolfsburg, Germany

    Christian Boltanski

    Through July 21, 2013

    Few artists dance with death like

    Boltanski. Though he is best known

    for emotionally intense installations

    that conjure the tragedy of World

    War II concentration camps, his true

    interest lies in the fact of dying. In

    his recent workfollowing a bizarrebet with MONA founder David

    Walshthe universal becomes per-

    sonal, and thematic interest

    becomes imbedded in his own skin,

    tied to his own life expectancy.

    Transgressing this last taboo means

    nothing to an artist who follows the

    example of Lucretius and refuses

    to fear or cheat his way out of lifes

    inevitable outcome: It is not

    melancholic, but felicitous when you

    accept death. It makes everymoment great, more important, and

    happier. This show of recent work

    connecting life and death focuses

    on a new, kinetic interpretation of

    theMenschlich (Human)archive. In

    Spirit(s), transparent renderings of

    the archival subjects (some living;

    some deceased) drift on air currents,

    coming briefly into focus, overlap-

    ping, then fading again in homage

    to our two-part finale in which physi-

    cal ending is followed by immaterial

    disappearancean equally eternal

    erasure of image and memory.

    Tel: + 49 (0) 5361 2669 0

    Web site

    Left: Keith Edmier and Victoria Regia,

    First Night Bloom, from Yes Nat-

    urally. Right: Zhang Huan, Long

    Island Buddha. Bottom right:Christian Boltanski, Last second.

    EDM

    IERANDREGIA:RICHARDDEBRUIJN,

    COURTESYTHEARTISTS/ZHANG

    HUAN:COURTESYPACEGALLERY/BOLTANSKI:

    FILIPEBRAGA,

    COU

    RTESYFUNDAODESERRALVESMUSEUDEARTECONTEMPORNEA,

    PORTO,

    VGBILD-KUNST,

    BONN2013

    http://www.meijergardens.org/http://www.gemeentemuseum.nl/http://www.kunstmuseum-wolfsburg.de/http://www.kunstmuseum-wolfsburg.de/http://www.gemeentemuseum.nl/http://www.meijergardens.org/
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    16 Sculpture 32.4

    Kunstverein Mnchen

    Munich

    Rebecca Warren

    Through June 16, 2013

    Ranging from the amorphous to the

    recognizable, Warrens sculptures

    have opened brash new possibilities

    for form, material, and subject

    matter. Taking one of the most tra-

    ditional subjects in art historythefemale nudeshe subverts inherited,

    male-defined clichs, while simul-

    taneously questioning the formal

    aspects of sculpturewhat it

    should be and what it should look

    like. The key to her inspired trans-

    gressions, which result in rough,

    distorted, unfinished or damaged-

    looking sculptures, lies in the

    malleability and freedom of clay. Left

    unfired, spontaneous gestures and

    improvised formal risk-taking con-tinue to breathe life into her awk-

    ward compositions; not yet resolved,

    still capable of change, these works

    maintain the freshness of sketches,

    multiplying into dynamic groups

    that blend shrewdly intelligent art

    historical and social insight with an

    emotional appeal that resonates on

    a much more basic level.

    Tel: + 49 (0) 89-221 152

    Web site

    Muse du Quai Branly

    Paris

    The Philippines: Archipelago of

    Exchange

    Through July 14, 2013

    The Quai Branlys mottowhere

    cultures converseexpresses

    a sentiment that dates back to its

    venerable antecedents, the Muse

    de lHomme and Muse des Arts

    Africains et Ocaniens. Building on

    the idea that unexpected artistic

    directions emerge when diverse peo-

    ples cross paths, it brings together

    (non-Western) artifacts from across

    time and space and sets them into

    motion in a contemporary context.

    Though not without its critics, such

    a commitment to exchange is more

    pressing than ever in todays increas-ingly interdependent and divided

    world. Archipelago of Exchange

    focuses on one particularly rich and

    relatively obscure area of cross-fer-

    tilizationthe strategically located

    islands of the Philippines. More

    than 300 pre-colonial workssculp-

    ture, pottery, textiles, and personal

    ornamentsreveal a rich and open

    visual culture that extended from

    prehistoric times, through succes-

    sive waves of Austronesian peoplesbringing Malay, Indian, Indonesian,

    Arab, and Chinese influences, to the

    arrival of Magellan in 1521. Though

    reminiscent of stylistically pure

    works from larger centers, these

    hybrid productions break with canon-

    ical types to become something

    entirely their own.

    Tel: + 33 (0) 1 56 61 70 00

    Web site

    Museum of Contemporary Art

    Chicago

    Amalia Pica

    Through August 11, 2013

    Using sculpture, film, and installa-

    tion, Pica explores the goals of

    enunciation and the performative

    nature of thought. She has a partic-

    ular fascination with communica-

    tion breakdown: for instance, works

    based on deaf monologues and

    halting conversations talk about

    inadequacies in our ability to make

    contacta point taken to absurd

    heights in a semaphore performance

    in which she spells out babble,

    blabber, and yada yada yada. Her

    often participatory projects directly

    intervene in public life, staging and

    condensing moments of culturalintimacy and civic participation. This

    show, which includes recent perfor-

    mance, sculptural, and film works,

    also features the new nomadic

    sculptureI am Tower of Hamlets, as

    I am in Tower of Hamlets , which

    Chicago-area residents may borrow

    and take care of for a week before

    returning.

    Tel: 312.280.2660

    Web site

    Nasher Sculpture Center

    Dallas

    Nathan Mabry

    Through July 7, 2013

    Inspired by everything from archae-

    ology and ethnology to Dada, Sur-

    realism, and icons of Modernism,

    Mabry crashes different aesthetics

    together to form bizarre, sometimes

    unsettling, conflations that stymie

    criticality. When Roman sculpture

    (Romulus and Remus with the she-

    Left: Ritual sculpture, from The

    Philippines. Above: Rebecca Warren,

    Croccioni.Top right: Amalia Pica,

    Stabile (with confetti).

    PHILIPPINES:CLAUDEGERMAIN,

    MUSEDUQUAIBRANLY/WARREN:

    REBECCAWARREN,

    COURTESYMAUREENPALEY,LONDON/PICA:GU

    NNARMEIERFORKUNSTHALLESANKTGALLEN,

    COURTESYTHEARTIST

    ANDMARCFOXXGALLERY,LOSANGELES

    http://www.kunstverein-muenchen.de/http://www.quaibranly.fr/http://www.mcachicago.org/http://www.mcachicago.org/http://www.quaibranly.fr/http://www.kunstverein-muenchen.de/
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    itinerary

    Sc l ture 2013

    CHR

    COURTES

    CENTERFORHISTORICALREENACT

    ENTS,

    JOHANNESBUR

    PAIK:COURTES

    SMITHSONIAN

    ERICAN

    ARTMUSEUM

    MABR

    Y

    NATH

    NMA

    RY,

    COURTESYCHER

    ND

    ARTIN

    olf) collides with African basketry

    a d contemporary unk la

    ausc en erg, anything is possi le:

    ning an va ue e a e,

    and interpretation murky. Sincere

    or cynical, profoundly deep or

    aughingly superficial, these mash-

    ups nevertheless possess he power

    o move as we as confou .

    poi , um r us, r itica ,

    and admiring, they capture the ambi-alent, constantly changing nature

    of our relationship o the cultural

    as . Ma rys out oor Sig ings

    i tal atio ea ur n wor

    ased on an ancient Jalisco figure

    in the Nasher Collection, in addition

    oProcess Art (B-E-A G-G-R-E-S-S-I-V E),

    a mons rous me amorphosis of

    o insBurg o Ca ais.

    Tel: 214.242.5100

    Web site

    New Museum

    N Yo

    C nter for Historical Reenactm nts

    rough Jul 17 2013

    CHR, an independent Johannesburg-

    ase group of artis s, cura ors,

    an riter , s ou e in

    in response to rapid, and unequal,

    development in South Africa. Taking

    a unique approach to social prob-

    ems, its projects focused on historic

    events and sites, particularly rom

    the apar heid era, o investiga e

    i orica con ex an explore o

    e unc i logi s intain eir

    grip on social systems. For After-after Tears, CHR members Do na

    Kukama, Gabi Ngcobo, and emang

    a Le u ere ave eve ope a m -

    tifa e i iti n a he

    life of he group and i s operational

    strategies, most notably he deci-

    sion to commit an institu ional

    dea h in 2012 in order o forestall

    inevita e evo u io rom x eri-

    mental latfo m to formal organiza

    tion. The gallery presentation eluci

    dates CHRs working philosophy ofsubversion, mediation, and transver-

    sa processes, w ile per ormances

    an pu ic r s uture

    activitiesall geared toward open-

    ing up discussions about the art

    system, insti utional mechanisms,

    an e comp exity o re ations ips

    wi hi o r s

    Tel: 212.219.1222

    eb site

    Smithsonian American Art

    Museum

    W shingto , DC

    N m June Paik

    Thr ugh August 11, 2013

    Vi r is , , s ,

    and new media sculpture visionary,

    Paik was one of the most innovative

    artis s of he 20th century, counter-ing doomsday Future Shock pre

    monitions it wi y an umanize

    en erings n o y. More

    than 0 years ago, he saw the sig-

    nificance (and dangers) of V and

    rapid communication and devoted

    the es of is career o proving that

    y o r

    and enslave. A student of commer-

    cial and ideological forces, he

    upended ap ropriated imagery (and

    its delivery de ices), turning propa-

    gan is ic pab um into a ca for

    in i is nc In he c s,

    he transformed t e video image

    into a tool capable o rede ining t e

    parameters of sculpture and instal-

    lation. This survey, the irst in a

    ri o i i i raw t

    artists archive (acquired by SAAM

    in 2009), features more than 65

    works, including key loans from Ger-many, whe e Paik was an influential

    mem er o F s, an more an

    4 it s r i rc i . Toget r,

    these selections offer an unprece-

    dented glimpse into his creative

    methodan appropriate approach

    o an innova or w o never ystifie

    is io s.

    Tel: 202.633.7970

    Web site

    Above: Cen er for His orical Reenac -

    men s, a Ku Randza. Top right:

    Selec ed objec s from the am ne

    a k ar h ve. igh Nathan Mabry,

    ro ess Art ( -E-A-G-G-R-E-S-S-I-V-E).

    Jun

    Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Front Cover | Search Issue | Next Pageculpture q qM MqqM MqM

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    QmagsTHEWORLDSNEWSSTAND

    http://www.nashersculpturecenter.org/http://www.newmuseum.org/http://www.americanart.si.edu/http://www.americanart.si.edu/http://www.newmuseum.org/http://www.nashersculpturecenter.org/
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    H J H

    Bread Army

    Paris

    For several years now, Hermann Josef Hack has been working in

    an unusual mediumbread. Inspired by the seasonal appearance

    ofWeckmnner(traditional German sweetbread people) in bakeriesover the winter holidays, the artist-activist decided to give these

    otherwise benign childrens treats a political purpose. Hack started

    organizing Weckmnner demonstrations on the streets of Cologne,

    with the little bread people holding up signs in German reading,

    Art collector, where did all your money come from? and Art =

    Capital, Artist = Capitalist. The project has grown over the years

    to include bread bombs strapped to trees and telephone poles and

    bread tanks roaming the streets. In one instance, Hack strapped

    baguettes to himself under a trench coat, like a suicide bread

    bomber, and stood in a public squar e. The Bread Armys most

    recent assault, in Paris last February, started with tanks parachuting

    into the city before making their way to the Eiffel Tower, Arc

    de Triomphe, and Centre Pompidou, while bread bombs appeared

    menacingly on trees. Despite its successful invasion, theBreadArmyultimately lost the battle, defeated by Parisian pigeons.

    Hack uses humor very intelligently: I find humor and games

    important in order to gain peoples sympathy, he explains.

    People in a good mood are much more likely to connect with the

    artwork. Hacks public interventions have addressed a wide variety

    of issues, from global warming to the ridiculousness of the art

    world. With Bread Army, the subject at stake was food justice.

    Hack likes to point out the absurdly tragic irony of a world in

    which some people die of hunger while others suffer from obesity.

    He equates his use of breadits stale by the time he gets to it

    to Christian symbolism, sharing, and charity. As a form of suste-

    nance, his bread sculptures attract not only pigeons, but also

    homeless people. The artist says that this is all part of the project.

    18 Sculpture 32.5

    LEFT:COURTESYTHEARTIST/RIGHT:DANIELLLUGANY,COURTESYTHEAR

    TISTS

    commissionscommissions

    Left: Hermann Josef Hack, Bread Army, 2013. Bread and glazed ceramic, 2

    views of project in Paris. Above: Octavi Serra, Mateu Targa, Daniel Llugany,

    and Pau Garcia,Hands, 2013. Chalk, 30 x 12 x 15 cm. each. 3 views of project

    in Barcelona.

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    Like his old teacher Joseph Beuys, Hack seeks to reclaim publicspace, both physically and politically. The intention of his work?

    Only art can save us now.

    O S, M T, D L,

    P G

    Hands

    Barcelona

    Spain hasnt been doing well lately. After taking a hard hit from the

    financial crisis, news items devoted to increased unemployment

    (now over 50 percent for young people and 25 percent over all),

    evictions, emigration, and suicides have become all too familiar. In

    March, following the banking debacle in Cyprus that led to nation-

    wide bank runs and empty ATMs, a new Spanish mattress com-

    pany was announcedone that made mattresses with built-in

    strongboxes.

    Spanish artists have taken this mayhem as both inspiration and a

    call to arms. In Barcelona last February, Octavi Serra, Mateu Targa,

    Daniel Llugany, and Pau Garcia joined together to cast chalk hands

    and install them throughout the old city center. Scattered along the

    famed Passeig de Grcia, the Plaa de Catalunya, and other popular

    areas, the hands hold nooses above bank doors, dig for change in

    payphones, and try to break into closed shop shutters with crow-

    bars. The deliberate placement ofHandsin the most touristed

    areasincluding in front of Gaud buildingsunderscore the

    artists intention to engage an international audience. In one case,

    a hand juts out of a wall, palm up and begging for alms, with a

    cardboard sign reading Help Spain (in English) underneath.

    As passersby notice the hands, taking pictures of them on their

    phones, Barcelonans and tourists alike are playfully reminded

    of the regions ailing economy.

    The artists tongue-in-cheek humor extends to their own self-

    characterization. All of them work in the field of visual arts, they

    write on the project Web site, and love the way actual and past

    politicians are doing their job. In a country where unemployment

    has reached levels last seen under Francos military dictatorship

    in the 1940s, Handsserves as a darkly humorous warning of the

    dangers faced by individuals left to navigate a dire situation ontheir own.

    R L-H

    Open Air

    Philadelphia

    For a few weeks last fall, Philadelphias iconic Benjamin Franklin

    Parkway was transformed into a laser lightshow. From City Hall

    to the Philadelphia Art Museum, 24 searchlights danced in the sky

    every night to the tune of recorded messages from local residents.

    Over the course of Rafael Lozano-Hemmers Open Airproject, more

    than 5,000 people recorded 30-second messages, including mar-

    riage proposals, amateur DJ mixes, declarations of love and politics,

    and lots of poems. Of course, no laser show would be complete

    without renditions of Led Zeppelin and Journey songs, but the

    most striking voice messages came from children talking about

    their daily lives; in one extremely sad case, a young girl apologized

    to her parents for causing their divorce. A techie at heart, Lozano-

    Hemmer designed this intricate project to include not only voice

    messages and lasers, but also smartphone apps and a Web site,

    where anyone could record messages, listen to others record-

    ings, and view live, recorded, or Google Earth renditions of how

    these were transcribed by the lasers.

    Open Airserved as a new portal for free speech in the city where

    the Constitution was signed. Yet as much as the project celebrates

    free speech, it also raises questions about privacy in the digital age.After all, searchlights and the Internet both have roots in military

    surveillance. On the one hand, I give the seduction of participa-

    tion, the idea that you are in the limelight, Lozano-Hemmer told

    Phawkerin an interview last October, but there is also a violent

    aspect in all of my projects. And that comes in because the desire

    to participate and to have interactivity cannot be divorced from

    the desire to police people and to control them. For the record,

    Lozano-Hemmer refused to censor any recorded messages.

    Elena Goukassian

    Sculpture June 2013 19

    Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Open Air, 2012. Xenon 10kW robotic searchlights,

    Turbulent Heap content manager, webcams, Linux servers, GPS, Google Earth

    3D DMX interface, iPhones, custom-software, and cloud computing and stor-

    age, interactive area: 1 mile. 2 views of project in Philadelphia.

    Juries are convened each month to select works for Commissions. Information on recently completed commissions, along with high-resolution

    digital images (300 dpi at 4 x 5 in. minimum), should be sent to: Commissions, Sculpture, 1633 Connecticut Avenue NW, 4th Floor, Washington,

    DC 20009. E-mail .JAMESEWING,

    COURTESYTHEARTIST

    ____________

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    Laumeier Sculpture Park in St.

    Louis, perhaps the American

    Midwests premiere sculpturepark, is taking on a new iden-

    tity, trading the familiar and

    accessible for the experimental

    and engaged. Curators there

    have recently re-energized the

    exhibition program in a bold

    attempt to recontextualize pub-

    lic sculpture, organizing two

    shows (so far) under the banner

    archaeology of place. Explor-

    ing life both far afield and close

    to home, Camp Out and

    Living Proposal introduced

    new sculptural practices into

    the park while providing active

    platforms for contemplationand learning.

    The catalogue forCamp Out:

    Finding Home in an Unstable

    World, a 2012 group exhibi-

    tion, declared a far-ranging

    interest in housing conditions

    from earthquake ravaged Haiti

    to flooded Pakistan, then

    turned its attention to urban

    blight in America, made worse

    by economic meltdown. Thats

    a lot of ground to cover for

    any show, and differences in

    approach and opinion were

    inevitable. Seen together, the

    selected sculptures manifestedan intergenerational duel of

    methodologies in which aes-

    thetic conflict reflected wider

    political crises.

    The contrast between Dr

    Wapenaars Treetent(2005),

    a large teardrop-shaped shelter

    strapped to a tree 12 feet off

    the ground, and Oliver Bishop-

    Youngs High Rise (2012), a

    dumpster filled with a city made

    of neatly arranged, salvaged

    shelves and equally neat stacks

    of chopped branches, is telling.

    Treetent(designed well before

    the 2008 stock market crash)

    is a luxury tent-cum-sculpture.

    The 600-pound pod, fabricated

    from heavy weatherized can-

    vas wrapped around a steel

    armature, does not look cheap.

    The cozy interior boasts pol-

    ished floorboards, and plastic

    windows offer views to the

    20 Sculpture 32.5

    SHAUNALVEY

    Oliver Bishop-Young,High Rise, 2012.

    Construction dumpster and mixed

    media, dimensions variable. FromCamp Out.

    Laumeier Sculpture Park and the Archaeology of Place

    by Daniel McGrath

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    outside.Treetentwas originally

    designed for the Road Alert

    Group, tree-hugger activists

    who chain themselves to trees,but campground owners quick-

    ly adopted it and turned it into

    a commercial success. The

    work typifies a comfortable

    middle class able to afford acts

    of ecological protest and camp-

    ing holidays that have nothing

    to do with bare survival.

    Bishop-Youngs High Rise, on

    the other hand, consists of a

    monumental pile of detritus

    worthy of Arte Povera.

    Designed to house critters, the

    converted dumpster looks like

    the product of a union between

    Noahs Ark and a beached

    Carnival cruise ship. It arrests

    and startles, while engaging

    in a good-humored joke at the

    expense of permanent monu-

    ments.High Risewill rot over

    time, but that disintegration

    wont prevent it from serving

    as an insulated haven for hiber-

    nating animals during St.

    Louiss harsh winters (the work

    remains on view). Bishop-

    Youngs other works include

    dumpsters as ping-pong tables

    and swimming pools, but this

    effort moves beyond design

    gimmicks into a formal dia-

    logue with the Judds and

    LeWitts that dot Laumeiers

    grounds. By raising ontological

    questions about sculpture in a

    perilous time of budget cuts forthe arts, this anti-monument

    echoes Shelleys Ozymandias:

    Look on my works, ye Mighty,

    and despair!

    This divergence of approach,

    as evident in the catalogue as it

    was in the show itself, set an

    established generation of artists

    (with stable careers, tenure, and

    mortgages) against a group of

    relative unknowns whose cir-

    cumstances probably necessi-

    tate a good bit of roughing it.

    Emily Speeds hilariousInhabi-

    tant (St. Louis)(2012), an

    impractical yet wearable suit

    in the shape of a city, suggests

    the involuntary nomadism and

    imploded futures that more for-

    tunate people can contemplate

    from a safe distance. There was

    a notable dichotomy between

    cynical youth and contented

    good intentions. Kim YasudasHunt and Gather(2012), for

    instance, an allotment farm that

    provided Laumeier with herbs,

    vegetables, and a small supply

    of free-range eggs laid in a spe-

    cially built coop, followed the

    fashion for boutique organic

    food.

    The intergenerational instabil-

    ity was best illustrated by the

    disconnect betweenLe Bcher

    (The Burning Stake, 2010),

    by the up-and-coming collective

    Sculpture June 2013 21

    SHAU

    NALVEY

    Above: Dr Wapenaar, Treetent,

    2005. Canvas, wood, and powder-

    coated steel, dimensions variable.

    Right: BGL,Le Bcher, 2010. Plexi-

    glas and acrylic, 96 x 108 x 72 in.

    Both works from Camp Out.

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    BGL (Montreal-based Jasmin

    Bilodeau, Sbastien Gigure,

    and Nicolas Laverdire) and

    Michael Rakowitzs paraSITE

    (2012).Le Bcherconsists of an

    oversized faux fire made from

    cut sheets of Plexiglas stacked

    in luminous layers and exhib-

    ited in an interior gallery.

    The visual warmth was nothing

    more than a cold illusion, a fire

    without heat, bleak without

    expecting sympathy. Just out-

    side,paraSITEbillowed in thewarm exhaust of an air condi-

    tioner. A DIY tent made from

    taped-together shopping bags,

    complete with instructions,

    it inflated like a balloon in the

    heated air. Was this inflatable

    acri de coeurabout homeless-

    ness, or was it supposed to be

    a sustainable solution intended

    for actual use? During the exhi-

    bition, children repeatedly

    stomped onparaSITE, tearing

    it to shreds. Their vandalism

    revealed the impractical nature

    of such a structurepresum-

    ably Rakowitz is aware of the

    problem and is satisfied with

    optimistic intent.

    Another exhibition, JuanChvezs Living Proposal:

    Pruitt-Igoe Bee Sanctuary,

    moved the politics of shelter

    even closer to home. Photo-

    graphs documenting Neolithic

    cave paintings of beekeepers,

    secondhand bee suits, Super 8

    films of overgrown shrubs,

    reclaimed hives, and giant tele-

    graph poles joined together in a

    multidisciplinary investigation

    into the history and legacy

    of St. Louis Pruitt-Igoe towers.

    Designed by Minoru Yamasaki

    (architect of the World Trade

    Center) and completed in 1956,

    the Pruitt-Igoe housing projectbecame notorious for its

    poverty, crime, and segregation.

    When the 33 buildings were

    finally demolished, they were

    laid to rest with Charles

    Jenckss widely quoted epitaph:

    Modern Architecture died

    in St. Louis, Missouri, on July

    15th, 1972 at 3:32 pm or there-

    abouts. The site was then

    abandoned and left as a bram-

    ble patch wasteland, every

    attempt at planning permission

    contested by hostile real estate

    developers. A new IKEA or a

    maximum-security prison? Not

    so fast. Chvez would have the

    land reserved for the honeybees

    that he discovered living there

    in thriving colonies, promising

    a ready supply of St. Louis-

    made honey.Untitled (Sacred Real Estate)

    (2012), the largest work in

    Living Proposal, resurrected

    the ghost of this hopeless era

    in civic values. Assembled from

    14 recycled lampposts arranged

    in a 1:1 scale footprint of a sin-

    gle tower block,Untitledalso

    replicated the form of a Native

    American henge, specifically

    the Mississippian Woodhenge

    in Cahokia, Illinois. The allu-

    sion coyly jabs at a more recent-

    ly collapsed society on the St.

    Louis side of the Mississippi

    Jim Crow segregation and

    the subsequently botched civil-

    rights-era desegregation.

    22 Sculpture 32.5

    TOP:

    COURTESYLAUMEIERSCULPTUREPARK/BOTTOM:SHAUNALVEY

    Above: Emily Speed,Inhabitant (St.

    Louis), 2012. Cardboard, electrical

    tape, and acrylic, dimensions vari-

    able. From Camp Out. Right: Juan

    William Chvez,Untitled (Sacred

    Real Estate), 2012. 14 lampposts,

    36 x 134 ft.

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    While Pruitt-Igoes calamitousracial, political, and demo-

    graphic troubles spawned a vast

    amount of ponderous scholar-

    ship and attracted much do-

    gooder attention, Chavezs pro-

    ject proved to be a revelation.

    Untitleds juxtaposition of mod-

    ern and prehistoric construction

    came to life when seen on

    Laumeiers great field in front

    of Alexander Libermans red

    behemothThe Way(1980). The

    interplay of Chvezs mottled

    wood and Libermans salvaged

    steel bookended the successes

    and failures that have charac-

    terized this place back to time

    immemorial. The city itselfseems to be cursed, built on

    Indian mounds unceremoni-

    ously demolished by develop-

    ers in the 1850s.

    Housed in a residential exhi-

    bition space, the rest of

    Chvezs objects breezily told a

    story of how, millennia ago, a

    hive of bees in the attic gave the

    house an endless pot of honey

    (Collective Alchemy, a pot of

    actual honey) but are now, in

    our upside-down world, count-

    ed as hazardous pests. Anti-

    monumental and domesticated,

    like the city and like Laumeier

    itself,Living Proposal (Sculp-

    ture) represented a seeminglyunderused zone teeming with

    life. Here, empty bee boxes

    and bee suits stood in for tow-

    ers and tenants, while the pho-

    tographs of tree blossoms in33

    buildings 11 stories (flower)

    showed how beauty can flower

    in the wake of Modernism.

    Why not let entropy take hold

    instead of building more box

    stores that will be abandoned?

    For 35 years, Laumeier

    Sculpture Park has played a

    leading role in exploring the

    interrelationships connecting

    art, history, and culture. These

    recent exhibitions demon-

    strated a strong commitmentto relevance, taking on press-

    ing issues through engaging,

    provocative sculpture. As the

    curators continue to use the

    park as a laboratory for a range

    of artistic practices, we can

    expect new works, both tem-

    porary and permanent, to offer

    fresh perspectives on place

    and life.

    Daniel McGrath is a writer

    living in St. Louis.

    Sculpture June 2013 23

    Juan William Chvez,Pruitt-Igoe Bee

    Sanctuary: The Living Proposal, 2012.

    C-print, 22 x 23 in.

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    BY MICHAL AMY

    Submerge, 2012. Urethane, Plexiglas,

    and reflections, 12 x 45 x 95 in.COURTESY

    THEARTIST

    MYTHS OFFANTASTICAL LIFE

    A Conversation with

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    Meeson Pae Yang understands the power of repetition. While

    one tree seen in isolation can be an object of breathtaking

    beauty, a cluster offers a very different visual and emotional

    experience, built up of the variations that occur across species,

    the contracting and expanding spaces between forms, and the

    fragmentation of light and ensuing tonal variationsallresulting in a shifting, almost breathing pattern of interactions.

    Significantly, Yang uses synthetic materials more often than

    not to allude to principles found in nature at large, as well as

    within our own bodies. Her forms may appear to float, evoking

    organisms in water, blood, air, or the cosmos (Pods, 2010;

    Biomes, 2009;Traverse, 2009), or they may remain anchored

    to the floor, like stones rolled into spheres by a river and now

    languishing in puddles, where they sprout algae-like accretions

    (Geodes, 2010). Yangs constructions look back to the building

    blocks of life, as well as forward into our future.

    Michal Amy:You came to art at an unusual point in

    your life. Could you explain how this happened?

    Meeson Pae Yang:In 1998, my younger brother was

    diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He died

    shortly afterwards, at the age of 15. After high school,

    I went to UCLA. I was struggling with the idea of loss,

    without being able to register what I was feeling, and

    having a terribly difficult time making sense of it all.I started studying English literature and then moved

    on to sociology. I was clearly in limbo. As I was working

    through my loss and pain, I discovered that I could

    barely communicate how I felt. I could not convey my

    internal struggle, and so I began to make tangible

    things. I bought some paint and clay. That was my first

    attempt at making art.

    MA:Were these early works expressionistic?

    MPY:I wasnt at all sure what I was doing. I didnt

    know how to use the materials. I wanted to see if I

    could figure out what was happening inside me by

    expressing it through an external object, so thatI could step back and look at it. In my second year of

    college, I decided to apply to the art department, but

    I needed a portfolio of 12 images for admission. I had

    no artistic background, and so I abandoned the idea.

    One week before the application was due, however, I

    suddenly felt that I needed to go ahead with it and

    managed to make 12 workswithout any sleep and

    through sheer determination. I submitted my portfolio

    and, amazingly enough, was accepted. I faced a

    steep learning curve, since I was introduced to art

    history, materials, and conceptual processes for the

    first time. I explored concepts pertaining to the body,

    cellular forms, and decay, which were directly related

    26 Sculpture 32.5

    Above and detail:Index, 200506. Plexiglas, vacuum-sealed

    packaging, sucrose solution, vinyl tubing, and silicone in outdoor

    steel and glass display case, 6.5 x 9.5 x 3 ft.

    COURTESYTHEARTIST

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    to my brothers illness. I was looking at Kiki Smith and

    Eva Hesse, who still influences my thinking.

    After UCLA, I took a class at a local community col-

    lege because I felt that I needed to improve my tech-

    nical skills. I took a sculpture class at El Camino Col-

    lege, where Professor Russell McMillin gave me the

    opportunity to show work in an outdoor display case.

    It was just a rectangular box of glass and stainless steel

    with fluorescent lighting; it looked terribly clinical, but

    it led to my first site-responsive installation. I planned a

    piece featuring individual elements that came together

    to form a larger unit.

    MA:Does this approach to making sculpture come from

    Eva Hesse?

    MPY: It does. Forms are serially repeated in Hesses

    work, and she explored the transparency and delicacyof materials. I was intrigued by her use of industrial

    materials that become organic, like living tissue.

    MA:Hesse also used tubes. Do the tubes and suspended

    bags inIndexgo back to your brothers illness?

    MPY:I had never been inside a hospital before. Once

    my brother became ill, I was exposed to tubes, probes,

    needles, and IV bagsmy brothers illness has a defi-

    nite relationship toIndex. I still use a lot of tubes,

    but they no longer literally translate medical devices.

    Instead, they represent movement, transportation, and

    connections between points in space. I find the trans-

    lucency of the tubes, and how they filter light, mes-

    merizing. They link a beginning and an end. They also

    reference veins running through leaves and our bodies, networks, freeways,

    and industrya constant flow. Indexmarks a definite turning point in mywork, with death and decay transformed into the potential for life. It refer-

    ences how nature uses systems to ensure reproduction and growth.

    MA:How did you decide on the title?

    MPY: An index is a structured sequence that groups scattered concepts

    together succinctly and illuminates an authors message. It provides a syn-

    thesized access point to the information contained within a text. A system

    of this sort allows you to establish relationships between different concepts

    by breaking data down into parts. In Index, I examined the basic structure of

    life, namely the cell, as a container of information. Cells come together to

    form a living organism and are organized and separated by their function,

    just as words and ideas come together to form text and are organized and

    sorted by the index. Indexing is about drawing connections from disparate

    parts; its about smaller units creating a whole.

    Sculpture June 2013 27

    COURTESY

    THE

    ARTIST

    Above and detail:Disperson, 2008. Preserved moss, silicone, and

    acrylic, 10 x 52 x 12 ft.

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    Indexmade me discover what I was doing, what

    my practice related to, and what I was interested in.

    My previous work was about processing the past,

    experimenting with materials, and constructing things.

    BeforeIndex, I was mostly interested in the body and

    its fragility. I was making tumor-like formations by

    twisting, bandaging, and burning foam and latex.

    WithIndex, I entered new territory.

    MA: Is your work improvised, or do you

    begin with one or more drawings based

    on a fixed idea?

    MPY:I begin work in different ways, but itis always a very organic process. I start with

    a rough sketch on a Post-It or napkin. Once

    I have my sketch, I gather materials and

    combine and rearrange them in different

    ways. Then, my process becomes very

    physical, because I need to see the work

    in three dimensions to verify whether the

    materials and form make sense. This part

    involves intuition and metaphor, taking

    information, systems, and structures from

    nature and transposing them on to my

    materials. Oftentimes, a word will trigger

    something, which will lead me to certain

    associations and guide me toward certain

    materials. I keep a log of words that set

    off strong visuals in my mind, and I go back

    to these words in order to build visual asso-

    ciations. Part of my process involves finding

    interesting materials. I occasionally stum-

    ble on things when walking through Asian

    marketsall sorts of dried mushrooms,

    roots, and seeds. I also find materials in

    tide pools, forests, industrial warehouses,

    medical supply stores, cosmetic stores, and

    craft and hobby shopspretty much any-

    where. I start with small experiments

    or prototypes. I have a box of what I call

    do-dads, which are small sculptures in

    which I try out materialssomewhat like

    Eva Hesses studio pieces. Once I feel that

    an idea has jelled, I move forward. The next

    step seems mechanized, because from this

    point, I work as though I were standing on

    an assembly line. I make multiples and

    variations on these multiples to create an

    immersive field or environment. I see all

    of my works as being interconnected. Iam creating an ecology or cosmology in

    which all of the pieces interact and func-

    tion together.

    MA:Your work does not look back. You use

    all kinds of new, synthetic materials and

    sometimes manmade objects, including

    beach balls. You seem to be abandoning

    natural forms in favor of artificial forms.

    MPY: I am drawn to synthetic materials

    because of their refractive and translucent

    propertiesin other words, how they inter-

    act with light. Then, regardless of whether

    the forms I gather are medical devices,

    28 Sculpture 32.5

    COURTESY

    THE

    ARTIST

    Above:Entity, 2006. Video projection,

    stereo sound, thermoformed Plexi-

    glas, LEDs, aluminum, vinyl tubing,

    and sucrose gel beads, 10 x 15

    x 15 ft. Below: Biomes, 2009. Cork

    bark, thermoformed Plexiglas, alu-

    minum, laser-cut polystyrene, and

    vinyl tubing, 9 x 8 x 5 ft.

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    industrial materials, consumer plastics, or electrical components, I am interested

    in the sum of their parts. I accumulate plastic spheres, vinyl beach balls, and

    sheets of thin mylar to form otherworldly environments. I am intrigued by the

    point where transformation takes placethis can be compared to a field with

    choreographed dancers, who create a different image with their bodies when they

    are seen from above. I use different synthetic materials to create biomorphic, geo-

    logical, or celestial forms. However, I also inject organic materials into my work

    to create hybrids that bring together micro and macro, hard and soft, transparent

    and opaque, real and fantasy, and order and chaos.

    For example,Dispersionincludes dried moss, acrylic

    seed capsules, and dangling vinyl branches. It rein-

    terprets the methods employed by plants to dis-

    perse their seeds. Each seed has its own mecha-

    nism for landing, germinating, and reproducing.

    Dispersionoffers a fantastical interpretation of spores

    spreading through thin air. The installation is like

    a still, a sliver of time freezing the moment when

    life is released. When viewers walk through, theycause the balls of moss to spin through oscillations

    in the air.

    MA:You also use liquids.

    MPY:I use fluids, as well as resin, which resembles

    frozen fluid. I am drawn to the translucence, light

    refraction, and visceral aspect of liquids. Like our

    planet, we are made up of about 70 percent water.

    Water is integral to all living things. Fluids give rise

    to the kinds of natural phenomena that attract me.

    For example, water causes light to bend, which gives

    us rainbows, mirages, and other altered views. I

    use plastics and acrylics because they refract light

    in a similar way.

    Sculpture June 2013 29

    COURTESYTHEARTIST

    Top left: Pods, 2010. Acrylic capsules, vinyl tubing, and

    silicone, 10 x 10 x 4 ft. Left: Installation view of

    Systems, 2006. Above: Macrospores, 2010. Ink, mylar,

    vinyl, acrylic capsules, and sea fan, 10 x 30 x 30 ft.

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    MA:Entityalso incorporates light.

    MPY: I layer light with materials, video projections, and structures. My work is about a

    density of images and information, which reflects our data-saturated age. Like the Light

    and Space artists, I am interested in capturing a multiplicity of views, natural phenomena,

    and the fleeting sense of life in the natural world through explorations of universals such

    as light, space, systems, relationships, change, order, and structure.

    InEntity, an LED light shines at the center of each pod-like sculpture and becomes thesource of life. It is embedded in a cluster of translucent red sucrose gel beads and resin

    whose structure resembles a dividing cell. A video projected on to this field of pods cre-

    ates a rhythmic, dream-like landscape of a microscopic universe. Gel-encased LEDs also

    appear inEncoding, which references DNA patterns. I also use mirrored mylar and CNC-

    engraved mirrors to create ethereal reflections and shadows. InGeodes, for instance, the

    light bounces off thin, turning layers of mylar, which seemingly causes pools of rippling

    water to form on the walls. A large part of my practice consists in creating such fleeting

    impressions.

    MA:So, these sculptures refer back to nature.

    MPY:Indeed, though I wouldnt say that nature is the only reference. I am most interested

    in the liminal statethe in-between state. I am interested in the slippage of information

    that occurs during the creative process, in what is present and what lies in the future,

    what is real and what is fantasy.

    MA: Do you see your works as continuing

    beyond the borders of the gallery?

    MPY:I see them as growing exponentially

    beyond the space they occupy. Repetition,

    movement, and rhythm hint at the poten-

    tial for growth and expansion. I am inves-

    tigating environments that create visceral,

    spatial, and perceptual encounters. I also

    view these works as building on each other

    in the sense of building an ecosystem

    of organisms regulated by the kinds of pat-

    terns, structures, and systems inherent in

    nature. Allan Kaprow spoke of the dissolu-

    tion of the line between art and life, and

    he noted that if we bypass art and take

    nature itself as a model or point of depar-

    ture, we may be able to devise a different

    kind of artout of the sensory stuff of ordi-

    nary life.

    MA: We are beginning to act like nature,

    as we clone bodies, manipulate genes, and

    construct the human genome.

    MPY:Despite our growing knowledge, there

    remains a tension between chaos and con-

    trol. Technology allows us to gather an

    enormous amount of information and bet-

    ter understand ourselves and our environ-ment. We can prevent and cure certain

    diseases, create delicious hybrid fruits, con-

    struct energy-efficient buildings, view dis-

    tant galaxies, and so much more. When

    this information is used in a responsible

    manner, we benefit. But there is always

    the fear of a brave new world. My work

    does not present a particular position; it

    is intended as a vehicle for contemplation.

    I try to introduce whimsy and fantasy. I

    am, in a sense, creating a mythology of

    forms.

    MA:What do you mean by that?

    30 Sculpture 32.5

    TOP:

    GENEOGAMI/

    BOTTOM:COURTESYTHEARTIST

    Above and detail:Traverse, 2009. Acetate, mylar,

    ink, acrylic, PVC pipes, cement, and shadows, 12

    x 40 x 20 ft.

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    MPY:I use data and imagery drawn from

    the world of science as my launch pad. Then

    I filter, layer, reconfigure, and compress that

    information into something other, whichis not a representation but an abstraction

    that relates to imagination, dreams, uni-

    versal concepts, narrative, and mythology.

    MA:Do you imagine a narrative?

    MPY:Not a set linear narrative, but a con-

    stellation of relationships that engage on

    multiple or parallel levels. I establish an

    energetic exchange across objects, images,

    and space that is transforming, evolving,

    and expanding. I have always been fasci-

    nated by parables, Greek mythology, sci-

    ence fiction, creation stories, fairy tales,

    alchemy, and fables.

    MA: They are all ways for humanity to

    explain the environment.

    MPY:Yes, and to explore the boundaries

    between the self and the outside world.

    I am interested in the processes that drive

    people to discover and explore. I was also

    thinking about 19th-century naturalists, who

    collected and documented their amazing

    new discoveries, and about cabinets of curio-

    sities and Mark Dions work. In a sense, my

    work explores the sense of wonder and our

    connection to our environment.MA:Is there a possibility of balance between

    nature and industry?

    MPY:I believe that a delicate balance can

    be achieved. The field of biomimicry emu-

    lates natures strategies in order to solve

    modern engineering problems. For the East-

    gate Centre in Harare, Zimbabwe, architect

    Mick Pearce and his team studied the cooling

    tunnels and chimneys of termite dens.

    The interior of the den holds a steady, com-

    fortable temperature, even while outside

    temperatures fluctuate between extremes.Applying these lessons, the Eastgate Centre

    uses 90 percent less energy than the sur-

    rounding buildings.

    MA: You are now venturing into architec-

    ture yourself.

    MPY:I am currently working on a large out-

    door public art project. Immersionwill be

    placed near the new Biomedical Health

    Sciences Education Building, on the Phoenix

    Biomedical Campus at the University of

    Arizona. It consists of three sculptures of

    abstracted neurons, made of welded steel

    and covered with epoxy paint, each 15 feet

    high and 30 feet wide. Neurons process and transmit

    cellular signals and serve as connection points in complex

    networks.Immersioncreates similar connections, guiding

    its users into an expanded cellular world.

    Michal Amy is a professor of the history of art at the

    Rochester Institute of Technology.

    Sculpture June 2013 31

    COURTESYTHEARTIST

    Above:Transmit, 2012. Mylar, video

    projection, sound, and shadows, 10 x

    20 x 15 ft. Below: Immersion(concep-

    tual rendering), 2015. Laser-cut and

    welded steel and epoxy paint, each

    sculpture: 30 ft. diameter; overall

    installation: 15 x 120 x 30 ft.

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    TATSUO MIYAJIMA

    The LifeThrough Time

    and Space

    A Conversation with

    Pile up Life No 1(detail), 2008. LEDs, IC, pumice stone, and

    electrical wire, 103.9 x 119.7 x 120.1 cm.COURTESYTHEARTISTANDLISSONGALLERY,LONDON

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    Karlyn De Jongh: At the beginning of your career, you created

    performances that addressed the concept of existence; now your

    work seems to focus more on time, as demonstrated in Pile Up

    Life (2008), which appeared at the 2011 Venice Biennale. Why

    did you make this shift? How are time and existence related? Are

    there fundamental differences for you between the two concepts?

    Tatsuo Miyajima:Existence and time are keywords connected with

    The Life. There is no difference between them. Both come from

    The Life; without The Life, they do not exist. At the beginning of

    my career, I stood for The Life. Before that, from 1982 to around

    1985, I focused mainly on existence, which I expressed through

    performance works. When I became conscious of The Life, I came

    up with three concepts. From 1988 to 1995, I focused on time. I

    did not explain The Life directly because I did not have a clear

    enough mind for it; until 1995, I was too immature to use words

    and also too inexperienced. Like many others before me, I foundthat it was easier to explain time as a concept than The Life.

    Recently, however, I have started the work of trying to explain

    The Life directly.

    KDJ:The Life is a central concept for your work. It is a translation

    of the Japanese wordinochi. How do you understand this concept?

    TM:When I translate inochiinto English, I add the to life. The

    meaning of The Life, as I use it, is larger than the usual sense. For

    example, there is my inochiand yourinochi, and animals have

    inochi as well. It is common to all, and the generic name is The

    Life. In the Eastern world, we embrace nature as a whole (including

    human beings) and take The Life as a totality. Therefore, The Life

    can refer to an individual, but the meaning is broadermore like

    the universe. It is a wide and deep theory. When I talk about The

    Life, I refer to all, to everything that has life. Thats why it is the

    same as an ecology: it encompasses the life of humans, the life

    of trees and plants, and the life of animals. I always take into con-

    sideration that everything is in relationship.

    KDJ:You have formulated three basic themes for your work: keep

    changing, continue forever, and connect with everything. You for-

    mulated these concepts some years ago: Are they not themselves

    temporal?

    TM:Everything keeps changing, life keeps changing. This is not

    easy to explain. Even the conceptkeep changingis constantly

    changing. It is linked to the second concept, continue forever. In

    Western theory, forever means permanent, which implies thatforever is unchanged. But my concept of forever is that everything,

    even the conceptual stages themselves, forever changes.

    The three concepts define a personal artistic goal. I create works

    in order to aspire. Those three concepts indicate The Lifea very

    wide, deep, and free subject. Now that I am more mature, I feel

    like expanding more and more and going deeper, rather than

    34 Sculpture 32.5

    Counter Void, 2003. Neon, glass, IC, aluminum, and electrical wire, 5 x

    50 meters overall.

    COURTESYSCAITHEBATHHOUSE,

    TOKYO

    BY KARLYN DE JONGH

    Since the 1980s, Tatsuo Miyajima, who lives and works in Ibaraki, Japan, has been making works that addresstime. Numbers made of LEDs count from one to nine or from nine to one; zero is not shown. For Miyajima,

    time raises the issue of what he calls The Lifean ongoing, natural process combining life and death

    and involving everything from humans and animals to plants and stones. These aspects of The Life are

    visible in Miyajimas three central concepts: first, keep changing; second, continue forever; third, connect

    with everything. Art in You, another important concept for him, considers the viewer as a mirror in which

    to contemplate The Life.

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    restricting myself. The ideas of forever and change do not go

    together in Western theory. To be eternal means to be permanent,

    a fixed shape that does not change eternally. But in the Eastern

    world, the thought is that a shape keeps changing throughmovement and that continues forever. For example, in the theory

    of samsara, The Life keeps changing its appearance; this process

    of continual change remains connected to life, which lasts forev-

    er. The movement is eternal. We use the word permanent, but

    one day, we humans, or life, will die, but changing by movement

    does not die out.

    KDJ:1,000 Real Life ProjectDeathclock(2003) is a countdown to

    death. The work presents many different temporalitiesthe life-

    time, time remaining, the speed of counting, and the ongoingness

    of the projectall working at different speeds. The speed of counting

    is different for each person, as is the length of the countdown

    to death. To what degree is time personal? To what degree does

    it exist without human awareness?

    TM:Time is definitely a personal thing. The notion that time goes

    by equally only began in Greenwich in 1884 as the conceptual

    interpretation of a new Modernism. It is based on an impersonal,

    general theory. Essentially, time is the same as an individuals

    death. It should be very personal. Individual death exists in

    an infinite variety of distinctions. One is not the same as others.

    KDJ:The Japanese word for the number zero is rei. It seems, how-

    ever, that you use ku, which has a broader meaning and is not

    necessarily a number. What does the silence or invisibility of the

    zero mean to you? How does the zero relate to other numbers,

    and what is its place in your understanding of time?

    TM:Zero in the Western world implies nothingness. I do not showzero, because it has two meanings: one is nothingness, and the

    other is vast quantity. Vast quantity means possibilitythere is a

    tremendous mass that we cannot see, but it is there. Zero was

    born approximately 5,000 years ago with both meanings, nothing-

    Sculpture June 2013 35

    TOP:

    TADASUYAMAMOTO,

    COURTESYSCAITHEBATHHOUSE,

    TOKYO/CEN

    TERANDBOTTOM:COURTESYTHEJAPANFOUNDATIONANDSCAITHE

    BATHHOUSE,

    TOKYO

    Above:Sea of Time, 1998. LEDs, IC, electrical wire, plastic coating, and water in

    FRP water pool, 125 pieces, 486 x 577 x 15 cm. overall. Below: Death of Time,

    199092. LEDs, IC, e