Phyllida Barlow "Siege"

The New Museum of Contemporary Art

poster for Phyllida Barlow "Siege"

This event has ended.

The New Museum presents the first New York solo exhibition of the work of British sculptor Phyllida Barlow. For her New Museum presentation,
Barlow will create a new, site-specific sculptural installation in the Museum’s fourth floor gallery. This exhibition is part of a series focusing on a single project or body of work within an artist’s larger practice. The series began last May with presentations by Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Gustav Metzger. “Phyllida Barlow: Siege” is curated by Gary Carrion-Murayari, Curator.

Barlow has been a seminal influence on British sculpture for the past forty years, having taught a generation of notable British artists. She began making work in the early 1970s, breaking away from earlier British sculpture exemplified by the formal abstractions of artists such as Anthony Caro. Instead, inspired by American sculptors like Eva Hesse, Barlow embraced a mode of working that drew stronger ties between the sculpture and the artist’s body. She also took on a broader and more experimental approach to materials. Her works often use disparate substances such as concrete, felt, wooden pallets, polystyrene, and fabric, often within the same work. These materials are a reflection of the urban environment in which she works and are often sourced directly from the streets. Barlow’s sculpture takes on an ephemeral, contingent quality as works
assembled on site will often be broken down after an exhibition and recycled into future work.

Since the beginning of her career, Barlow’s sculptures have been appreciated for their playful formalism and the relationship they have to the built environment. Her works are often inspired by objects that direct or impede our movement through space. Barriers, scaffolding, and security fences are reinterpreted into rough-hewn constructions with exuberantly painted surfaces. Assembling her sculptures quickly and intuitively, they become distant memories of objects rather than faithful reconstructions. In her installations, Barlow scales her work to fully inhabit and transform a given architectural space. Ranging from intimately scaled objects occupying corners and corridors, to works that take on an imposing and overwhelming scale, her installations challenge and parody the heroic monumentalism of her forebears. Barlow reveals that sculpture can accurately capture the joyfulness, absurdity, and transience of life.

Media

Schedule

from May 03, 2012 to July 15, 2012

Artist(s)

Phyllida Barlow

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use