"Transient Spaces". For Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin, Whiteread has created two new sculptures cast from a London building she recently acquired. Devoid of architectural flourish, Untitled (Apartment) is comprised of a series of small, nondescript rooms, suggestive of the low-income, standardized housing that proliferated after the Second World War as Europe rushed to rebuild itself.
British artist Rachel
Whiteread has created a
unique body of sculpture in
which ordinary domestic
objects and architectural
spaces are transformed into
poetic, thought-provoking
works of art. In the late
1980s, Whiteread began
making casts from household
items including beds, sinks, bathtubs, and wardrobes,
emphasizing the private aspects of domestic life and
reflecting the human body in symbolic terms.
Using industrial materials such as plaster, concrete, rubber,
and polystyrene, Whiteread typically cast the space
underneath, around, or inside these objects, creating
negative impressions of the items she worked with. These
familiar yet strange forms, which record the shape and
surface of the original objects in detail, function like a
death mask, often evoking feelings of absence and loss and
conjuring up various personal memories and associations for
the viewer.
Over time, Whiteread has expanded the scope of her
output to include casts of larger architectonic spaces. In
1993, the artist created House, a concrete cast of the
entire interior space of a Victorian-era working-class home
located on an East London street. After the walls of the
house were removed, a pale gray structure was revealed,
standing like a ghost of its original form. Whiteread's
Holocaust Memorial, another monumental piece, was
unveiled in October 2000 in Vienna's Judenplatz. Devoted to
the Austrian Jews killed during World War II, this monolithic
structure-an impenetrable, inside-out library-alludes to Nazi
book burnings and also makes symbolic reference to the
people of the book, remarking not only on the Holocaust
but the larger history of the Jewish people.
For Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin, Whiteread has created
two new sculptures cast from a London building she
recently acquired. Devoid of architectural flourish, Untitled
(Apartment) is comprised of a series of small, nondescript
rooms, suggestive of the low-income, standardized housing
that proliferated after the Second World War as Europe
rushed to rebuild itself. For its companion, Untitled
(Basement), Whiteread cast a staircase, which she
reoriented by setting it on its side in order to create an
uncanny sense of motion. Embodying the generic nature of
much postwar architecture, the staid blocky form of both
works emphasizes the simple geometry of the structures
they were cast from, and also recalls the scale of 1960s
Minimalist sculpture. Throughout its history, the London
building from which these works derive has had a fluid
identity, readily changing functions over time as required by
its occupants, existing first as a synagogue, then a textile
merchant's warehouse, and soon it will again be
transformed, this time as Whiteread's new home and studio.
Echoing the transient spirit of postwar culture, Untitled
(Basement) and Untitled (Apartment) blur the distinctions
between private and public, past and present, as well as
religious and secular, recalling the aesthetic and economic
concerns of that time.
In the early 1990s Whiteread began to receive international
attention as part of a stylistically diverse group of artists
known as the Young British Artists (YBA). Among her
contemporaries, Whiteread has distinguished herself for
creating an innovative body of work that reflects a quiet,
contemplative spirit, receiving such accolades as the Tate
Gallery's prestigious Turner Prize (1993) and an award at
the 47th Venice Biennale (1997). Most recently, in the
summer of 2001, Whiteread's work was the subject of a
retrospective at the Serpentine Gallery, London, and a new
public sculpture, Monument, was unveiled in Trafalgar
Square.
Guggenheim Museum
Unter den Linden 13-15 D-10117 Berlin
Opening hours: daily 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., thursdays to 10 p.m.
Press Information:
Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin Svenja Simon/ Sara Bernshausen
Tel. +49-30-202093-14 Fax. +49-30-202093-20