RHINEBECK, NY.- T Space is presenting Furniture by Architects / Sculpture by Margaret Saliske, curated by Mark McDonald, co-founder of Fifty/50 and, for over four decades, a leading authority on twentieth-century design. The exhibition brings architect-designed furniture, fixtures, and objects into dialogue with an installation of small wall sculpture by Margaret Saliske. Set within the Steven Myron Holl Foundation Archive, the works can be read as microcosms of architectural ideation, testing relationships between form, structure, material, and space. Reflecting the interdisciplinary ethos of T Space, the exhibition explores the intersections of sculpture, furniture, architectural models, and exhibition space, inviting visitors to consider how objects shape our understanding of scale, context, function, materiality, and spatial experience.
As Mark McDonald notes, In the context of T Space, and alongside architecture and furniture, [Saliskes] sculptures can be read as models for imagined or speculative spaces. There is a push and pull in that ambiguity. The reverse can also happen: architectural models and furniture begin to read as sculpture.
This dialogue emerged naturally. Saliske elaborates: They could be architecture, or machine parts, or a section lifted from nature. The viewer brings their own experiences to an abstract form to make sense of it. When I make sculpture, all forms in my environment are available consciously or unconsciously. The trick for me is to keep this information suspended so that everything is in play at once.
The exhibition includes works by Frank Lloyd Wright, Alvar Aalto, Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Rudolph Schindler, Robert Mallet-Stevens, Frank Gehry, Steven Holl, Jean Nouvel, Philip Johnson, Serge Chermayeff, Henry P. Glass, and Richard Meier.
T Space is pleased to present Furniture by Architects / Sculpture by Margaret Saliske, curated by Mark McDonald, co-founder of Fifty/50 and, for over four decades, a leading authority on twentieth-century design. The exhibition brings architect-designed furniture, fixtures, and objects into dialogue with an installation of small wall sculpture by Margaret Saliske. Set within the Steven Myron Holl Foundation Archive, the works can be read as microcosms of architectural ideation, testing relationships between form, structure, material, and space. Reflecting the interdisciplinary ethos of T Space, the exhibition explores the intersections of sculpture, furniture, architectural models, and exhibition space, inviting visitors to consider how objects shape our understanding of scale, context, function, materiality, and spatial experience.
As Mark McDonald notes, In the context of T Space, and alongside architecture and furniture, [Saliskes] sculptures can be read as models for imagined or speculative spaces. There is a push and pull in that ambiguity. The reverse can also happen: architectural models and furniture begin to read as sculpture.
This dialogue emerged naturally. Saliske elaborates: They could be architecture, or machine parts, or a section lifted from nature. The viewer brings their own experiences to an abstract form to make sense of it. When I make sculpture, all forms in my environment are available consciously or unconsciously. The trick for me is to keep this information suspended so that everything is in play at once.
The exhibition includes works by Frank Lloyd Wright, Alvar Aalto, Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Rudolph Schindler, Robert Mallet-Stevens, Frank Gehry, Steven Holl, Jean Nouvel, Philip Johnson, Serge Chermayeff, Henry P. Glass, and Richard Meier.
Margaret Saliske lived and worked in New York City until moving to the Hudson Valley in 1989. She has a B.A. degree from Bennington College and attended the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program in studio art. In 2018 she received an Apexart fellowship to Seoul South Korea and in 2019 was a visiting artist at the American Academy in Rome.
She exhibited her work at Artists Space and 55 Mercer Street Gallery in New York City before moving upstate where she has shown her work at numerous area galleries. She exhibited with Pamela Salisbury in Hudson NY and Lockwood Gallery in Kingston NY. In 2023, she was represented at Art Taipei by Carrie Chen Gallery. She was recently included in Let It Shine an exhibition of New York artists in Mark McDonalds L House designed by Steven Holl. Saliske lives and works in Hudson, New York.