Showing posts with label Walker Art Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walker Art Center. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2010

Aided by the Walker, Leo Castelli Dominated the World's Fair


James Rosenquist, World's Fair Mural, 1964. Oil on Masonite, 240 x 240 in. Courtesy of the Weisman Art Museum, Minneapolis.

I still don’t have an answer to the question of who made the bizarre Warhol mosaic in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, but I did come across a strange little 1964 World’s Fair side story that involves art dealer Leo Castelli and his connections to Minneapolis. First, we need a little bit of background.

In her new biography of Castelli, titled Leo & His Circle, writer Annie Cohen-Solal posits 1964 as one of the dealer’s most triumphant years, marked by Robert Rauschenberg winning the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale. Oddly, though, she does not make a single mention of the 1964 World’s Fair, in which Castelli was almost equally dominant, thanks to some help from his friend Philip Johnson (a connection highlighted by reader @allllliee).

Johnson was designing the New York State Pavilion and the fair and picked three Castelli artists — John Chamberlain, Roy Lichtenstein, and Robert Rauschenberg — to be among the ten artists responsible for decorating his building's exterior. By the end of the year, with the fair still running, Castelli had shown two more artists adorning the pavilion (James Rosenquist and Andy Warhol), meaning that half of the artists on the prominent building — visited by more than 100,000 people by the time it closed in October 1965 — were represented by Castelli.

While having Rauschenberg win the Golden Lion no doubt earned Castelli an extra boost of credibility in the art world, having five of his artists (or at least, four, since Warhol’s contribution was painted over, then covered with a tarp, and finally removed) shown at the government-sanctioned fair couldn't have hurt his standing with the general public, and with potential collectors.


Roy Lichtenstein, Girl at Window (World's Fair Mural), 1963. Oil and Magna on plywood. Courtesy of the Weisman Art Museum, Minneapolis.

In any sense: why the World’s Fair obsession? I was at the Frank Gehry-designed Weisman Art Museum a few weeks ago and had the pleasure of seeing two wonderfully massive murals that had been created by Rosenquist and Lichtenstein for the World’s Fair. What are they doing in Minneapolis, 1,200 miles from the fairgrounds and Castelli’s adopted hometown, I wondered?

Christopher James, the museum’s director of communications and events, was kind enough to investigate and shared that Castelli apparently asked Walker Art Center director Martin Friedman to commission (read: pay for) the Lichtenstein and Rosenquist murals. Friedman agreed. However, after the fair, Friedman generously offered the murals to Carl Sheppard, the chair of the University of Minnesota's art history department, if he wanted them for the university’s art museum (which was not yet named the Weisman). “Sheppard was glad to accept them,” James writes. He would have been crazy not to: they’re incredible pieces, well worth a visit to the Land of 10,000 Lakes. (Bonus: admission to the Weisman is free every single day.)

Monday, August 2, 2010

Eleven Sculptures in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden


Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Spoonbridge and Cherry, 1985-1988. Photos: 16 Miles [more]

Until this weekend I had not been in Minneapolis in the summer for almost a decade. The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden and its restored Spoonbridge and Cherry look quite a bit different in July than it does in December, when I normally visit. (It is right across the street from the Walker Art Center and well worth a visit.)


Martin Puryear, Ampersand, 1987-1988. Granite, 167 x 36 x 38 in. and 163 x 36 x 36 in.



Sol LeWitt, X with Columns, 1996. Cinder block, concrete, 168 x 312 x 312 in.



Frank Gehry, Standing Glass Fish, 1986. Wood, glass, steel, silicone, Plexiglas, rubber, 264 x 168 x 102 in.


Jackie Winsor, Paul Walter's Piece, 1975. Copper, creosoted wood, 24 x 32 x 32 in.


The Walker also owns a video by Jackie Winsor and Liza Béar documenting the creation of Paul Walter's Piece, 1975.


Alexander Calder, The Spinner, 1966. Aluminum, steel, paint, 235 x 351 x 351 in.



Mark di Suvero, Arikidea, 1977-1982. Cor-Ten steel, steel, wood, 316 1/2 x 510 x 450 in.


Visitors can ride on the small platform that is attached to the sculpture: an interactive Mark di Suvero! Said di Suvero, "Wouldn't a rusty brown spider standing on a bed of fresh snow be great to behold?"


Dan Graham, Two-way Mirror Punched Steel Hedge Labyrinth, 1994-1996.



Jackie Ferrara, Belvedere, 1988. Cedar, 126 x 506 x 407 in.



George Segal, Walking Man, 1988. Bronze, 72 x 36 x 30 in.


Detail view of Jenny Holzer, Selections From the Living Series, 1989. Granite, 28 elements: 17 1/4 x 36 x 18 in. each.



Installation view of Jenny Holzer, Selections From the Living Series, 1989.


Siouxland cottonwood tree and basalt stone


"The planting of seven thousand oak trees is thus only a symbolic beginning. And such a symbolic beginning requires a marker, in this instance a basalt column. The intention of such a tree-planting event is to point up the transformation of all of life, of society, and of the whole ecological system..."

Joseph Beuys

More trees inspired by Joseph Beuys' 7,000 Eichen ("7,000 Oaks"), originally conceived for Kassel, Germany, are on view, thanks to Dia, on 22nd Street in Chelsea.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden [Photographs]


Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Spoonbridge and Cherry, 1985-1988. Photos: 16 Miles [more]

Minneapolis's venerable Walker Art Center prohibits photography in its galleries, so images of the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, a Walker off-shoot, will have to suffice as an alternative. It opened back in 1988 and features a remarkably well curated selection of work, including a Dan Graham pavilion, a Richard Serra sculpture, Jenny Holzer benches, and a large, glass greenhouse that includes a Mario Merz neon on its roof (reading città irreale or "unreal city," for non-Italian proficient people like me) and a soaring Frank Gehry sculpture of a fish, commissioned by the Walker back in 1986, when the architect's success (particularly in the museum world) was far from assured. The pièce de résistance is, of course, the Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen spoon and cherry, which, after a recent cleaning and repainting, looks as fresh as the day it arrived.


Left: Ellsworth Kelly, Double Curve, 1988; right: Richard Serra, Five Plates, Two Poles, 1971



Frank Gehry, Standing Glass Fish, 1986


Dan Graham, Two-way Mirror Punched Steel Hedge Labyrinth, 1994-1996


Jackie Ferrara, Belvedere, 1988

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

The Sudden Omnipresence of Alan Saret


Alan Saret, Brick Wall and Sun, 1976, at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center

Suddenly, Alan Saret is everywhere. His tangled, wiry 1988 sculpture The AF World was hanging mysteriously alongside pieces by Andre, Judd, Serra, and Sandback at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis this winter.  In New York, The Drawing Center had a show of his Gang Drawings earlier this year, the most recent exhibition of his work since James Cohan put some of his sculptures on display in 2004. Then, as I was walking through P.S.1 in late December, I discovered that the gapping hole in the wall on the fourth floor was his work, as well.

Roberto Bolaño's General Entrescu in 2666 would have loved it, "... finally he talked about cubism and modern painting and said that any abandoned wall or bombed-out wall was more interesting than the most famous cubist painting, never mind surrealism..."