Robert Wilson's critically acclaimed, monumental interpretation of the Passion of Christ, 14 Stations, will open at Mass MoCA (Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art). 14 Stations is a massive sculptural environment first created by the theater director/artist on the occasion of the year 2000 Passionspiele (Passion Play) presented last year in Oberammergau, Germany. Mass MoCA will be the premier American venue for 14 Stations.
Robert Wilson's critically acclaimed,
monumental interpretation of the Passion of Christ, 14 Stations, will open
at MASS MoCA (Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art) on December 9, 2001.
14 Stations is a massive sculptural environment first created by the theater
director/artist on the occasion of the year 2000 Passionspiele (Passion
Play) presented last year in Oberammergau, Germany. MASS MoCA will be the
premier American venue for 14 Stations.
Invited by the organizers of the Passion Play to create a large outdoor
installation in conjunction with the play's 40th consecutive presentation -
the event has been staged in Oberammergau every decade since 1634 - Wilson
designed a vast Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) along which the fourteen
moments of the Passion of Christ are presented in a series of light,
sculpture, and sound environments. The work is entered through a wide
transept-like building, from which one proceeds down the "nave", a boardwalk
flanked by 12 Shaker-style chapels or cottages. Each cottage houses a
dramatic tableau which can be viewed through a small window, with many of
the scenes featuring sound and all dramatically illuminated in Wilson's
precise, signature style.The tableaux vary - boulders dangle from the
ceiling and slowly revolve; hand-carved red wolves menace the viewer against
a backdrop of a romantic mountainscape; and stuffed birds soar with
disturbing realism. For the final station, the apse, Wilson constructed a
teepee of 25' tall saplings and thatch. At Oberammergau, 14 Stations was
sited in a grassy meadow; at MASS MoCA the work will be reconstructed within
the museum's nearly 300 foot -long Building 5 gallery.
The 14 Stations refers to the moments of passion through which Christ passed
on the way toward crucifixion. In the Middle Ages pilgrims performed
ceremonial reenactments of the suffering of Christ and the saints to attain
spiritual enlightenment. Routes were ritual walkways, and the act of
pilgrimage strengthened the identification of the pilgrim-worshipper with
the story. In 14 Stations, Wilson explores this rich source of
art-historical and religious imagery, translating themes typically reserved
for painting, stained glass, and sculpture into environments that combine
architecture, landscape design, and theater.
Wilson, however, does not offer a literal rendering of the 14 Stations, nor
is the work intended as a religious reenactment. His personal, open-ended,
and at times abstract interpretations of the Passion invite multiple
readings, and visitors to 14 Stations need not be familiar with the
symbolism of Christian thought to appreciate the piece. The installation
integrates the traditions and visual languages of multiple cultures, and is
abstract, rather than illustrational. Wilson offers a universal experience
using the basic Christian story as the basis for a participatory theater.
The visitor's own movement through the space as well as image, sculpture,
light, and sound all become "characters" in Wilson's representation.
In writing about 14 Stations at Oberammergau for The New York Times John
Rockwell noted, "From the form 14 Stations has taken, it appears Mr. Wilson
drew his pictorial inspirations not just from representations of Christian
cathedrals, [Shaker] villages, and craggy Alps, but also from photos of
nearby Dachau, Auschwitz and the ultimate Nazi killing machine, Birkenau,
near Auschwitz...Whether consciously or subconsciously intended, the
connection with the Holocaust adds a powerful resonance to this already
moving and important work. Mr. Wilson is apparently trying to find a
permanent home for 14 Stations most likely in the United States. If that
happened, more people would have a chance to experience its beauty, and its
disturbing undercurrents, themselves." Although the installation at MASS
MoCA is not permanent, the premier United States presentation of 14 Stations
in North Adams will be on view from December 9, 2001, through October 2002.
Born in Waco, Texas, Robert Wilson was educated at the University of Texas
and Brooklyn's Pratt Institute. He studied painting with George McNeil in
Paris and later worked with the architect Paolo Solari in Arizona. Moving to
New York City in the mid-1960s, Wilson found himself drawn to the work of
pioneering choreographers George Balanchine, Merce Cunningham, and Martha
Graham, among others artists. Wilson's theatrical works include Deafman
Glance, Einstein on the Beach with Philip Glass, The Black Rider with Tom
Waits and William S. Burroughs, the CIVIL warS: a tree is best measured when
it is down, Death Destruction & Detroit, Alice, Time Rocker with Lou Reed,
POE-try, The Forest, Cosmopolitan Greetings with Allen Ginsburg, Alcestis
with Laurie Anderson, Alice in Bed and Lady from the Sea with Susan Sontag,
and Great Day in the Morning with Jessye Norman, as well as numerous operas.
A recipient of two Rockefeller and two Guggenheim fellowships, Wilson has
been honored with numerous awards for excellence and in 1986 was the sole
nominee for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama for the CIVIL warS.
While celebrated for his theatrical pieces, Wilson is also firmly rooted in
the visual realm. His drawings, paintings, and sculpture have been
presented around the world, and he is the recipient of many prestigious
awards including the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize for lifetime
achievement, as well as the Golden Lion for Sculpture at the Venice
Biennale. Major Wilson exhibitions have appeared at the Museum of Fine Arts
in Boston (February 1991); the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris (November
1991); the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston (1991); and the Instituto de
Valencia de Arte Moderno (September 1992).
Wilson's 14 Stations was commissioned by the city of Oberammergau to
accompany its world-renowned Passion Play, and in particular to commemorate
the 40th anniversary of the production. The Passion Play originated in
1633, when, to spare the city from the plague, the citizens made a vow to
produce it. It was performed for the first time in 1634, and the citizens
of Oberammergau have produced it continuously every 10 years since then. The
play has become a major pilgrimage event, with over half a million visitors
from all over the world coming to Oberammergau to see the play throughout
its 20-week run through the summer and fall.
14 Stations at MASS MoCA is partially funded by Goethe-Institut Inter
Nationes Boston.
MASS MoCA is open from 11 A.M. until 5 P.M. and closed Tuesdays. MASS MoCA
is the country's largest center for contemporary visual and performing arts
and is located in North Adams, Massachusetts, on a restored 19th-century
factory campus.
Gallery admission is $7 adults, $5 for seniors and students,
$2 children 6 - 16, and free for children under 6. Members are admitted
free at all times.
For additional information call 413 662 2111 or visit
the web site.
Lenora Farrington
Marketing Assistant
MASS MoCA
1040 MASS MoCA Way
North Adams, MA 01247
413-664-4481 ext. 8111
FX: 413-663-8548