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Icelandic artist Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir brings 26 life-sized sculptures to Chicago |
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Steinunn Thorarinsdottir's Borders at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. Photo: James Ewing.
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CHICAGO, IL.- "Borders, a public sculpture installation by renowned Icelandic artist Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir, was installed on August 8 at Solti Garden on the northwest corner of Jackson and South Michigan Avenue. Sponsored by Bloomberg and hosted by the Chicago Park District in conjunction with the Grant Park Conservancy, Borders consists of 26 sculptures that inhabit the park until spring 2014. Recently installed to great acclaim in New York City, Dallas and Seattle, the androgynous figures that make up Borders have been placed by Thórarinsdóttir around Solti Gardens, uniquely positioned in response to the Chicago site.
The Chicago Park District is excited to welcome Borders to Grant Park, said General Superintendent and CEO Michael Kelly. The nature of this exhibition is a perfect fit with our efforts to find innovative ways to engage the public in our parks.
Hailed by The Seattle Times as public art that promote(s) self-reflection and connective empathy through their ungainly forms and their quiet intrusion into our everyday lives, the sculptures are arranged in 13 pairs one cast of aluminum, the other iron. The pairs mirror each other in silent conversation. The difference of materials provides a striking visual contrast, highlighting the forms as both familiar and alien within the social space of the park. Modeled after Thórarinsdóttirs oldest son, the static, life-sized figures allow park visitors to engage with them by crossing the invisible borders they create.
Using human figures makes it possible for people to relate to this work very directly, but at the same time the characteristics of the figure are reserved and anonymous they dont force themselves on the viewer, said Thórarinsdóttir. "The show reflects on the opposites of human existenceon division but also on unity.
Originally installed in Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza, near the United Nations headquarters in New York, Borders was created specifically for the active, vibrant public space that held frequent social gatherings from political rallies to farmers markets. Thórarinsdóttir chose its Chicago site, similarly, as a populated space bracketing frequent cultural happenings from the nearby Art Institute of Chicago and Millennium Park.
The Grant Park Conservancy is proud to play a role in bringing Ms. Thórarinsdóttirs fascinating, highly interactive sculpture to Chicago, says Conservancy President Bob O'Neill. A key component of our mission is to nurture Grant Park as an environment conducive to the arts and education. Borders invites and intrigues the viewer, allowing them to examine and appreciate the artistry and craftsmanship, while simultaneously querying into why the artist has positioned them as they are.
Chicago is one of the worlds leading capitals for sculpture, and it has long been a goal of mine to have a piece prominently displayed in the city, added Thórarinsdóttir. I am grateful to the Chicago Park District and the Grant Park Conservancy for inviting me to place Borders in such an ideal setting: a perfect bookend to the world class sculpture in Millennium Park and the Art Institutes exquisite collection.
Steinunn Thórarinsdóttir (b.1955) studied at the University of Portsmouth Fine Art Department in England and the Accademia di Belle Arte in Bologna, Italy. She has been working professionally for more than 30 years and has exhibited widely in Europe, Japan, the United States, and Australia. Her works are in private, public, and corporate collections around the world. She has completed commissions at Leifur Eiríksson International Airport, Iceland, and the two-part memorial Voyage in Hull, England, and Vik, Iceland among others. Thórarinsdóttir recently finished a nine-meter high sculpture for the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. Her exhibition Horizons, which was first exhibited in early 2007 at the Katonah Museum, New York, has since traveled to six venues. Among them are the Dixon Museum and Gardens, Memphis, Tennessee; the Georgia Museum of Art; and the Nathan Manilow Sculpture Park, Illinois. Thórarinsdóttir lives and works in Reykjavik, Iceland.
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