D Amelio Terras
New York
525 West 22nd Street
212 3529464 FAX 212 3529464
WEB
Cornelia Parker
dal 7/5/2003 al 21/6/2003
(212) 352-9460 FAX (212) 352-9464
WEB
Segnalato da

Brian Sholis


approfondimenti

Cornelia Parker



 
calendario eventi  :: 




7/5/2003

Cornelia Parker

D Amelio Terras, New York

An exhibition of new artworks by British artist. She will present works related to the gravity and the reversal of destiny, both central themes in her recent work.


comunicato stampa

D'Amelio Terras is pleased to present an exhibition of new artworks by British artist Cornelia Parker. It will be her first New York solo exhibition in five years. She will present works related to the gravity and the reversal of destiny, both central themes in her recent work.

Parker will present Subconscious of a Monument, an installation that consists of suspended lumps of soil removed from beneath the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Engineers excavated the earth in their efforts to prevent the monument's collapse. In a levitating reference to Walter De Maria's New York Earth Room, the dried clay is suspended from the ceiling by wires, hovering as if it has just filtered through the gallery floor.

Another new work also features items exhumed from the earth. These lost objects were dug up by hobbysts and amateur archeaologists armed with metal detectors from sites across the US and UK. They are evocative rather than valuable, emblematic rather than rare. The project, whose working title is Found in Britain: Lost in America, Found in America: Lost in Britain, extends far beyond the gallery walls, as each object is to be reburied on the opposite side of the Atlantic. What is left to the viewer is documentation of a moment in their journeyx{2039}their brief time above groundx{2039}as the objects may never be found again.

Parker reverses archaelogical convention by preserving the earth rather than objects excavated from it. That which was lost by accident, then found, is lost again on purpose. Whether meaning is embedded in the material or derived from her transformations, the resultant objects juxtapose formal beauty with lyrical import.

Cornelia Parker was born in 1956 in Cheshire, England. She lives and works in London. A 1997 Turner Prize nominee, she has held recent solo exhibitions at Frith Street Gallery, London; Galleria Civica D'Arte Moderna (GAM), Turin; and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, which traveled to the Chicago Arts Club and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia. Parker was included in Days Like These: 2003 Tate Triennial in London, and later this year will present a solo exhibition at Guy Bartschi in Geneva, Switzerland.

Image: Subconscious of a Monument 2003 Soil removed from underneath the Leaning Tower of Pisa

May 8 ­ June 21, 2003

Opening reception: Saturday, May 10, 6 to 8pm

For press and visuals requests, please contact Brian Sholis at 212.352.9460

Next exhibition: Summer group exhibition, June 26 ­ August 1, 2003.

D'Amelio Terras represents Polly Apfelbaum, Erica Baum, Delia Brown, Tony Feher, Joanne Greenbaum, Glenn Ligon, John Morris, Rei Naito, Rika Noguchi, Damián Ortega, Cornelia Parker, Miguel Rio Branco, Karin Sander, and Yoshihiro Suda.

With assistance from the British Council.

D'Amelio Terras
525 West 22nd Street NY 10011
New York

IN ARCHIVIO [17]
Polly Apfelbaum
dal 10/11/2005 al 23/12/2005

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