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Siah Armajani: Bridge Over Tree - Public Art Fund
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Siah Armajani Bridge Over Tree

Brooklyn Bridge Park, Empire Fulton Ferry Lawn
February 20 - September 29, 2019

About the Exhibition

Today, it is hard to grasp how radical this work by Siah Armajani (b. 1939, Teheran, Iran) was when first conceived nearly 50 years ago. Interactivity and immersive experiences have since become cultural buzzwords and artistic strategies. Architectural form and sculptural practice now often share a common language. However, when originally shown in a Minneapolis public park in 1970 as part of a temporary sculpture exhibition, Bridge Over Tree was barely recognizable as a work of art. For the first time, this seminal installation has been re-created by the artist for presentation by Public Art Fund.

The basic construction and materials of Armajani’s bridge are straightforward. Timber trusses and decking covered by a shingle roof evoke the vernacular of early American bridge design. That sense of familiarity is challenged by its form, which rises and falls at a sharp angle in the center to accommodate a single evergreen tree. Released from the customary function of a bridge to efficiently link two points, this structure follows a different logic. As public sculptures go, it is large; as a bridge in New York City, it may be among the most intimate. Yet its angular forms still echo those of its massive, iconic neighbors, as well as the stepped and peaked rooflines of the Manhattan skyline. Bridge Over Tree invites us to experience the idea of a bridge in a new way. In a world of walls and barriers, what does it mean to create points of connection, to establish relationships among different things, to invite interaction, and to build a bridge between the world and the poetic imagination?

Siah Armajani: Bridge Over Tree is curated by Public Art Fund Director & Chief Curator Nicholas Baume.

Location

Brooklyn Bridge Park, Empire Fulton Ferry Lawn
Brooklyn Bridge Park, Empire Fulton Ferry Lawn

Image Gallery

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About the Artist

Siah Armajani (b. 1939 Tehran, Iran) was born in Iran and moved to the United States in 1960 to attend Macalester College in Minnesota, where he continues to live and work. Armajani’s most celebrated public art works are bridges, walkways, and gardens, including the Irene Hixon Whitney Bridge, Minneapolis; the World Financial Center’s promenade (in collaboration with Scott Burton and Cesar Pelli), Battery Park City, NY; Gazebo for Two Anarchists at Storm King Art Center, Mountainville, NY; Floating Poetry Room, Ijborg, Amsterdam; Bridge for Iowa City, University of Iowa; and numerous gardens at Villa Arson Museum, Nice, France. Armajani was commissioned to design the Cauldron for the 1996 Centennial Olympic Celebration in Atlanta.


Leadership support for Bridge Over Tree is provided by Quay Tower/Oliver’s Realty Group/RAL Development Services with additional support from the Martin and Brown Foundation and Rossi & Rossi, London and Hong Kong.

Public Art Fund is supported by the generosity of individuals, corporations, and private foundations including lead support from Bloomberg Philanthropies, along with major support from the Charina Endowment Fund, The Marc Haas Foundation, Hartfield Foundation, the Donald A. Pels Charitable Trust, and The Silverweed Foundation.

Public Art Fund exhibitions and programs are also supported in part with public funds from government agencies, including the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Special thanks to the Office of the Mayor, the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President, and Brooklyn Bridge Park.

The exhibition coincides with the retrospective at The Met Breuer, Siah Armajani: Follow This Line, on view through June 2, 2019.


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