|
Project Main Page
Participating Artists
Sponsorship
Location
Publication
For immediate release
TARGET ART IN THE PARK
OPENS SUMMER 2002 EXHIBITION,
FINALE OF 3-YEAR, $1 MILLION PUBLIC ART PROGRAM
New Works by Dan Graham, Mark Dion, Dalziel + Scullion
Organized by Public Art Fund on behalf of City Parks Foundation
On view July 12 through October 31, 2002
NEW YORK CITY (May 17, 2002) - Target Art in the Park,
an unprecedented three-year contemporary public art program in
New York City, opens with its final exhibition on July 12, 2002
in Madison Square Park. The exhibition features new works by Dan
Graham, Mark Dion, and Dalziel + Scullion that highlight the link
between city life and the natural world, and explore the present
and past of historic Madison Square Park. Visitors will encounter
a series of cast-aluminum expedition tents invoking distant, exotic
landscapes; a glass pavilion that creates a kaleidoscopic visual
experience; and a field station for learning about the natural
wonders of the park.
Target Art in the Park, organized by Public Art Fund,
is funded through a $1 million gift from Target Stores to the
City Parks Foundation. Past Target Art in the Park exhibitions
featured work by Teresita Fernandez, Tony Oursler, Navin Rawanchaikul
and Tobias Rehberger.
ARTISTS' PROJECTS
Dan Graham's Bisected Triangle, Interior Curve
For Target Art in the Park, Graham will create a sleek two-room,
walk-in pavilion of two-way reflective glass. During the past
three decades, Graham has become internationally famous for his
pavilions, which he has created for parks all over the world.
Bisected Triangle, Interior Curve will be his first work for a
New York City public park. Situated at the northwest end of Madison
Square Park, Graham's pavilion will be a triangular form (20 feet
x 24 feet x 24 feet) that integrates into the wedge-shaped geometry
of the 19th-century park.
By entering the pavilion through a sliding door and looking out
through its glass walls, park visitors can contemplate their own
reflections while simultaneously observing the hustle and bustle
along Broadway. This optical distortion - both meditative and
visually disconcerting - can vary profoundly, as the glass walls
become transparent or opaque in shifting natural light. Inside
the calm of this unlikely urban oasis, viewers become increasingly
conscious of movement and activity surrounding the structure:
trees blowing above, passersby and traffic moving past, and even
one's own reflected gaze. Just as moving through urban streets
can prompt changing perspectives of the city, pausing inside Graham's
pavilion induces park-goers to see a familiar place in a new light.
Dan Graham, often associated with Minimalist artists Dan Flavin
and Sol LeWitt, is a Conceptual artist who emerged as a pioneer
of performance and video art in the early 1960s. By the 1970s,
he had begun working with quasi-architectural structures, the
body of work for which he is best known.
Mark Dion's Urban Wildlife Observation Unit
Working closely with scientists and non-art institutions, Mark
Dion mines the fields of ecology, botany, ethnography, and natural
history museum displays in realizing his installations and sculptures.
His long-standing interest in environmental issues has
led him to create Urban Wildlife Observation Unit, a constructed
urban ecological center
that will allow park visitors to reexamine their surroundings
by taking a closer look at the natural environment - the animals,
bugs and trees - in Madison Square Park.
Fashioned after a 19th-century wildlife refuge viewing area,
Dion will adorn his field station with objects, drawings, and
other props that pertain to the park's natural surroundings. Created
with input from park rangers and New York-area naturalists, Dion's
interactive sculptural area allows for a unique and educational
engagement with Madison Square Park.
Dion's Urban Wildlife Observation Unit will be accompanied by
a full range of exciting educational programming, including a
series of free lunchtime talks, a 32-page field guide, and an
educational program for junior high school students. The noon
talks will be delivered by artists, naturalists, botanists and
historians, each of whom have been invited by Dion to speak about
a particular aspect of Madison Square Park. The field guide -
available free to all visitors - will include illustrations and
descriptions of the park's flora and fauna, writings by art critic
Gregory Volk and naturalists Michael Crewdson and Margaret Mittelbach,
as well as a timeline history of the park.
Dalziel + Scullion's Voyager
Scottish artist duo Dalziel + Scullion will make their New York
debut with Voyager, three two-person expedition tents of cast
aluminum. Each tent is exquisitely rendered, with luminous surfaces
that mimic the texture of a real tent, suggesting stretched fabric,
arched framework and pulled tethers. Sited at the southern end
of Madison Square Park, Voyager serves as reminder of exotic places,
the spirit of adventure, and the American wilderness. Simultaneously
referencing architectural design and historic expeditions, Voyager
links Dan Graham's interest in urban psychology and physical space,
and Mark Dion's investigation of urban ecology and 19th-century
representations of nature.
Working collaboratively since 1993, Matthew Dalziel and Louise
Scullion have created multimedia and sculptural works that investigate
the complex and necessary relationship between humanity and nature.
Their recent collaborations - which have ranged from a tin-roofed
rain pavilion to an installation reconstructing the origins of
a glacial valley in Norway - transport viewers from their familiar
contemporary surroundings to imaginary, distant landscapes in
which nature is a more rugged, vibrant element.
Public Art Fund
The Public Art Fund is New York's leading presenter of artists'
projects, new commissions, installations, and exhibitions in public
spaces. With 25 years of experience
and an international reputation, the Public Art Fund identifies,
coordinates and realizes a
diversity of major projects by both established and emerging artists
throughout New York City. By bringing artworks outside the traditional
context of museums and galleries, the Public Art Fund provides
a unique platform for an unparalleled public encounter with the
art of our time.
The Public Art Fund is a nonprofit arts organization supported
by generous gifts from individuals, foundations and corporations,
and with public funds from The New York State Council on the Arts,
a State Agency, and the City of New York Department of Cultural
Affairs.
City Parks Foundation
The City Parks Foundation (CPF) is an independent, non-profit
organization that combines arts, sports and educational programs
with community involvement to revitalize parks and the neighborhoods
that surround them. Its programs, most of which are free, reach
over 600,000 kids and adults in parks throughout New York City
each year.
With the ongoing support of the City of New York/Parks &
Recreation, City Parks Foundation leads the Campaign for the New
Madison Square Park - a $12 million initiative to revitalize and
maintain the historic green space.
Target Stores
Minneapolis-based Target Stores serves guests at 1,081 stores
in 47 states nationwide by delivering today's best retail trends
at affordable prices. Whether visiting a Target store or shopping
online at target.com, guests enjoy a fun and convenient shopping
experience with access to thousands of unique and highly differentiated
items. Target Stores, along with its parent company Target Corporation
(NYSE:TGT), gives back more than $2 million a week to its local
communities through grants and special programs. Since opening
its first store in 1962, Target has partnered with nonprofit organizations,
guests and team members to help meet community needs.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
DAN GRAHAM
Since his first solo show at the John Daniels Gallery in 1969,
Dan Graham has exhibited internationally in four Documentas (1972,
1977, 1982 and 1992) and in solo shows and mid-career retrospectives
at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; the Whitney Museum of American
Art, New York; and Fundação de Serralves, Porto.
A Conceptual artist, Graham emerged as a pioneer of performance
and video art in the early 1960s. By the 1970s, he had begun working
with quasi-architectural structures, the body of work for which
he is best known. Born in 1942 in Illinois, Graham currently lives
and works in New York.
MARK DION
Mark Dion was recently commissioned to create works for Aldrich
Museum of Art in Ridgefield, Connecticut; the Tate Gallery, London;
and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco. He has
exhibited in major museums and galleries worldwide, including
solo exhibitions at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver; Galleria
Emi Fontana, Milan; Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio;
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York; and American Fine Arts, Co.,
New York. Mark Dion explores the fields of ecology, botany, ethnography
and natural history museum displays, as well as works in conjunction
with scientists and non-art institutions to create his installations,
sculptures, and video work. Born in 1962 in Massachusetts, Dion
lives in Beach Lake, Pennsylvania. Dion has an upcoming exhibition
at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in December 2002.
DALZIEL + SCULLION
Dalziel + Scullion was recently commissioned to create major works
at The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh; York Sculpture Park, Wakefield,
Scotland; and Oriel 31 Gallery, Newtown, Wales. They have also
had solo exhibitions at the Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne,
Australia; the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh;
and Ikon Gallery, Birmingham. Working collaboratively since 1993,
Dalziel + Scullion investigate connections between humanity and
nature through their multimedia and sculptural works. Matthew
Dalziel was born in 1957 in Irvine, Scotland; Louise Scullion
was born in 1966 in Helensburgh, Scotland.
# # #
Contact:
Public Art Fund
tel: (212) 980-4575
e-mail: press@publicartfund.org
|