GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.- Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park is presenting the sculpture exhibition, George Segal: Body Language. This exclusive exhibition organized by Meijer Gardens and the Segal Foundation explores Segals career and focuses on his remarkable versatility in representing body language across different media including plaster and various print techniques. This exhibition will run through January 3, 2021.
Approximately sixty years ago, George Segal embraced a new working process that catapulted him to become one of the most recognized twentieth-century sculptors. During the summer of 1961, Segal was introduced to medical gauze bandages which he began to use as a primary material to cast plaster sculptures. The following year he was included in the legendary exhibition The New Realists, along with Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg and Jim Dine. In response to this group exhibition, the American media began to refer to the artists as a new movement: Pop Art.
The George and Helen Segal Foundation is pleased to see Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park exhibit their collection of Segal works along with rarely seen prints, said Rena Segal, President of the George and Helen Segal Foundation. It is wonderful that his work will inspire new audiences.
George Segal: Body Language revisits the career of George Segal and focus on his creative vision in representing body language across a variety of materials. This is the first exhibition of Segals work at Meijer Gardens since 2004 and is the first time that a selection of the gift of 32 prints, one sculpture and three wall reliefs from the Segal Foundation and Rena Segal are on display.
We are thrilled to share this selection of George Segals sculptures, reliefs and two-dimensional works with our guests, said Jochen Wierich, Curator of Sculpture & Sculpture Exhibitions at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. Segals exploration of the human body across different media continues to resonate. By showing the wide range of prints he made while also working on sculpture, we hope to add a new and largely unexplored dimension to this important 20th century artist.