Posts Tagged ‘Anish Kapoor’

Leviathan

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011
Anish Kapoor – Leviathan

Anish Kapoor – Leviathan – Interior view of the artwork
 © MONUMENTA 2011- Anish Kapoor – Leviathan – Interior view of the artwork. Photo Didier Plowy – All rights reserved Monumenta 2011, French Ministry for Culture and Communication.

Anish Kapoor’s massive sculpture Leviathan is a reference to the giant beast that lurked in the depths of ancient seas, and a metaphor for the primordial fear of the unknown. Elements of sea-serpents, whales, giant squids were figuratively mythologized into this magical beast that induced terror in the heart of ancient sailors but also signified the fear of drowning, of being swallowed by storms, sucked under by tempests at sea.

The following is a video of Richie Hawtin’s performance in front of Anish Kapoor’s sculpture on June 21st.

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Anish Kapoor: Turning the World Upside Down

Monday, September 27th, 2010
Anish Kapoor Sky Mirror, Red 2007, Installation view Kensington Gardens, London

Anish Kapoor Sky Mirror, Red 2007, Installation view Kensington Gardens, London, © 2010 Dave Morgan

Anish Kapoor’s Sky Mirror, once on view at the Rockefeller Center in New York City and Spire, are part of a collection of outdoor reflective mirrors being exhibited for the first time this Fall in London’s Kensington Gardens.

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Anish Kapoor Part of Permanent Collection at Maxxi

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

By Helen Shih

Anish Kapoor, "Widow" (courtesy of Anish Kapoor Studio)

Rome is the home of classical art and architecture such as the Coliseum, St. Peter’s Basilica, and the Sistine Chapel, but its art scene is changing as the city attempts to modernize itself. Several years ago, Richard Meier updated the Roman architectural landscape with the Ara Pacis Museum. The structure was built over an existing building that houses the Ara Pacis Augustae, a sacrificial altar dating to 9 B.C.

Rome’s latest venture, the Maxxi, or the National Museum of the XXI Century Arts, is the city’s first national museum of contemporary art. No relics lie in Maxxi, where Zaha Hadid’s flowing lights and staircases wind through the space ensconced in concrete. The debut collection includes work from artists such as Gilbert and George, William Kentridge, and Gerhard Richter. Not to be missed is Anish Kapoor’s 2004 sculpture “Widow,” a 15 meter long black tube consisting of PVC coasted polyester fabric that flares out like a horn. (more…)

The Tino Sehgal experience is for you to find out

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

By Michelle Cheung

I went uptown on what seemed like the coldest day this winter to find out exactly what it is that Tino Sehgal is doing as part of the museum’s 50th Anniversary celebration. You will not find any photographic or videographic evidence of Tino Sehgal’s latest exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum in New York but, trust me, I saw it and it is there.  His latest mise-en-scéne promises to yet again push the boundaries of artwork through performance and participation. After going through his highly personal exhibition, I can attest that this London-born, Berlin-based artist has kept his promise. We, as spectators and participants, go with zero expectations, not even knowing the title of his piece, and leave with an invaluable experience. Any prior knowledge of his work will just taint one’s takeaway, and this is why I hesitate to say more. The existentialist in anyone will find inspiration and meaning in his work. If you can take my word for it, then you should stop reading this now.

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Anish Kapoor’s Giants

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

By Kiša Lala

Marsyas, 2002 © Anish Kapoor

Marsyas, 2002 © Anish Kapoor

Over the past decade, Anish Kapoor’s projects have been growing gargantuan in scale, challenging the viewer to engage with the work on an architectural level. Kapoor has collaborated with Future Systems on the Neapolitan Subway, and has an ongoing relationship with the structural engineer, Cecil Balmond, who has worked with him in the past on Marsyas, a sculpture built for the Turbine Hall at the Tate Modern. In January I visited the private estate of a collector in New Zealand where the excavation of a mountain was underway to conform to the scale of the artist’s monumental vision—a tubular red skin that would bridge both sides of the mountain. As an evolution of Marsyas, the sculpture played with the idea of void and absence, that whose essence is shaped by the object around it. The dualities of light and dark, inside and outside, are a motif in the artist’s work. Skin, which separates our internal and external worlds and is a part of both, is in play in the story of Marsyas who, as a musician, dared to challenge the god Apollo to a contest, and was flayed alive for his arrogance when he lost. Looking at the work, the sculpture’s taut red membrane appears to act as the conduit for pain and pleasure, a measure of our sensitivity to the world, the blood-rich darkness within us, made inside out.

Temenos © Anish Kapoor

Temenos © Anish Kapoor

When I visited his studio in London later in March, the artist had been conceptualizing another project with Balmond, Temenos, which is a 110m long tube of steel wire, much like a nylon stocking stretched between two rings. At a cost of £2.7 million, it is the first of five works planned as the Tees Valley Giants, an arts project to be completed over the next decade in Middlesbrough, UK, and one of the largest in the world. Temenos is the Greek word for a space apart, a sanctuary of the gods.

Mr. Kapoor’s studio is a world unto itself, spanning three consecutive buildings in Camberwell, and teeming with assistants busy on various stages of creation from construction to finish. In the first hall I watched assistants machine-cut plastics and Styrofoam, which are later scaled and cast into metal. In the second, Kapoor was experimenting with cement being excreted by a mechanical mixer into intestinal strips that formed dung-like mounds on the floor. At the end of the room, on tables, were maquettes and a tiny scale model of the gallery in the Royal Academy of Arts, which would house his Shooting into the Corner exhibition (now on view in London). Looking down into the Lilliputian model of the gallery then, I could see more waxy, red gunk being spewed and splattered with violence against the room’s opposite wall. Finally, the last warehouse was a hall of mirrors, where finished, jewel-like metallic shields hung austerely, warping or shearing the sound of my voice and the scale of my body as I passed them by. (more…)