NEW YORK, NY.- Rebecca Robertson, President of
Park Avenue Armory announced that Christian Boltanski has been selected to create a monumental new work for its annual commissioning program, which it launched in May 2009 with Ernesto Netos critically acclaimed anthropodino. The Boltanski work, No Mans Land, will be created for the Armorys Wade Thompson Drill Hall and will be on view from May 12 through June 14, 2010.
In No Mans Land, the Armory's 55,000 square-foot Drill Hall will be covered with thousands of pieces of used clothing, creating an undulating sea and a 40-foot-high mountain. A 5-story crane with a large construction claw that is commonly used for dredging will grab clumps of clothing from the mountain, hoist and then drop them so that the individual pieces will flutter down back into the mass on the floor. Industrial conveyer belts will snake through the sea of clothing, continuously feeding the mountain which will be dredged, once again, in a never-ending cycle. In addition to the mechanical noises of the crane, claw and conveyer belts, the work will be further animated by the pounding sound of human heartbeats. Boltanski is also creating a series of installations throughout the Armorys grand corridors and historic rooms.
Tom Eccles, Executive Director of the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College, is the curator of the exhibition. Park Avenue Armorys annual commissioning program is supported by a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation NYC Cultural Innovation Fund, with additional support for No Mans Land from Daniel and Estrellita Brodsky and The Lauder Foundation/Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund.
The goal of our commissioning program is to enable different artists to use the Armorys dramatic scale and unique character to both catalyze and inform their work and to be part of these works, not just a container for them, stated Ms. Robertson. No Mans Land builds upon Boltanskis explorations of the tension between the majestic and the infernal, individuality and anonymity, and memory and loss. In contrast to the exuberance and playfulness of the Neto installation, the Boltanski work will provide a contemplative, emotive and visceral experience.
No Mans Land is a vision reminiscent of Gustav Dorés famous illustrations of Dantes Inferno that continues Boltanskis exploration of humanitys capacity for evil, stated Mr. Eccles. Boltanski himself compares the claw to chance or life as a game of dice.
No Mans Land is a second iteration of an ongoing series that includes Personnes, an installation at the Grand Palais in Paris that will open in January 2010, as part of Monumenta, an annual series supported by the Ministére de la Culture et communication and co-produced with the Centre national des arts plastiques and the Réunion des musées nationaux. Park Avenue Armory and the Grand Palais have been working together since 2006 to identify a collaborative project and with Christian Boltanski the two organizations will be presenting one artist creating two similar works in very different contexts. Both installations will draw upon a vocabulary and materials that Boltanski has been using in other recent large-scale installations, yet will take on much of their meaning from the specific building and city within which each is created.
Christian Boltanski
Christian Boltanski was born in occupied Paris in 1944 and currently lives and works in Malakoff, France. Boltanski has had major exhibitions at the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1984); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; MOCA, LA (1988); New Museum, NY (1988); and Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (1990). He has recently had solo exhibitions the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein (2009); Magasin 3, Stockholm (2008); and La Maison Rouge, Paris (2008).
Boltanskis recent works include Memorys Flight (2008), a permanent installation in Bologna, Italy; an installation for the 2009 Echigo-Tsumari Triennial exhibition in Niigata, Japan; and a sound installation for the 2008 Folkestone Triennial in southeast England. His work has been featured in Documenta V (1972), VI (1977), and VIII (1987).
Boltanskis work is in the permanent collections of major museums around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art, NY; Guggenheim Museum; Museum of Contemporary Art, LA; Walker Art Center; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; Tate Modern; and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. In New York and Paris, Boltanski is represented by Marian Goodman Gallery.