Outdoor Sculpture

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The Hall Art Foundation was founded in 2007 and makes available postwar and contemporary art works from its own collection and that of Andrew and Christine Hall for the enjoyment and education of the public. In the fall of 2012, the Hall Art Foundation in Reading, Vermont opened its doors to the public—welcoming visitors to view its program of rotating, temporary exhibitions of contemporary art. Converted from a former 19thcentury dairy farm, the property consists of a stone farmhouse, cow barn, horse barn and tractor barn. In 2017, the campus of converted galleries expanded with a new visitor center. Exhibitions are held seasonally, from May through November, and are open to the public by appointment, free-of-charge. The Hall Art Foundation also operates a museum in Derneburg, near Hannover, Germany. Originally a fortified castle, the history of Schloss Derneburg stretches back almost one thousand years. For several centuries a monastery, then a residence for

the Anglo-Hanoverian Munster family, since 1976 the current Schloss was the home and studio of artist, Georg Baselitz until its sale in 2006. Since then, and in cooperation with the Schloss Derneburg Museum gGmbH, the Schloss has been reunited with the adjacent domain and both have undergone extensive renovations to become a public museum space for the Hall Art Foundation. The Hall Art Foundation also has an exhibition partnership with the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, in North Adams, Massachusetts to present monumental outdoor sculpture, in addition to a long-term installation of sculpture and paintings by Anselm Kiefer in a specifically repurposed 10,000 square foot building on the MASS MoCA campus. The Hall Art Foundation collaborates with other public institutions around the world to organize exhibitions and facilitate loans from its own collection and that of the Halls. #hallartfoundation

Outdoor Sculpture

Richard Deacon Olafur Eliasson Marc Quinn Hall Art Foundation Reading, Vermont

HALL A R T F O U N D AT I O N

Olafur Eliasson,Waterfall, 2004 (detail)

R E A D I N G

V E R M O N T

Administrative Office 521 West 23 Street New York, NY 10011 +1 (212) 256-0057 hallartfoundation.org

Vermont Location 544 VT Route 106 Reading, VT 05062 +1 (802) 952-1056


Richard Deacon Untitled 1991, 1991

British artist Marc Quinn (b. 1964) is known for making work that challenges the boundaries between art and science. Using a wide range of media including ice, glass, metal, marble and lead, Quinn’s work addresses the transience of human life through scientific knowledge and artistic expression.

Richard Deacon (b. 1949) has been a leading figure in British sculpture since the 1980s. He describes himself as a fabricator who constructs objects using manufacturing or building techniques, rather than as a sculptor who carves or models. In a career spanning more than four decades, Deacon has worked with a diverse range of materials including laminated wood, stainless steel, corrugated iron, polycarbonate, marble, clay, vinyl, foam and leather. Working on both domestic and monumental scales, he manipulates his materials to create structures that combine organic and biomorphic forms with elements of engineering.

Standing at nearly 20 feet tall, Quinn’s The Incredible World of Desire (Phragmipedium Sedenii) (2003 – 2004) appears to the human eye like what a real orchid must look like to a bee. A highly detailed and colorful photographic image of a Phragmipedium Sedenii orchid has been transferred onto a stainless steel framework. Monumental from the front and back, the sculpture appears as a simple line in space when viewed from the side. Quinn has described the effect as resembling a “flower superimposed on to the landscape” in a way that reminds him “of an image stuck on the front of a child’s plastic toy.”

Deacon’s Untitled 1991 (1991), made of painted welded steel, consists of three vertical loops intersected and linked along their top and bottom horizontal axes. Using a technique called heat-line bending, Deacon transforms a flat plate of steel into a threedimensional and organic form. The anthropomorphic shapes, resembling eyes, ears or open mouths, are joined together in a dynamic and airy structure that contradicts the rigidity and heaviness inherent to the material of steel. The welding lines are purposefully revealed to emphasize the work’s structure and “fabricated” status. With its overlapping arcs and undulating curves, the sculpture presents complex shapes and intersections from every angle.

Artwork © Richard Deacon

Marc Quinn The Incredible World of Desire (Phragmipedium Sedenii), 2003–2004 world turning. They are a celebration of life. I like all kinds of flowers, irises, sunflowers and anthuriums are great but none are quite as good as orchids. Wild orchids are often considered to be a symbol of fertility, purity and spiritual perfection. The Incredible World of Desire (Phragmipedium Sedenii) (2003–2004) is meant to “advertise the wonder of life” and to remind us, as Quinn puts it, of “the overwhelming sensuality of the natural world, whose life force is one of pure desire.”

Olafur Eliasson Waterfall, 2004 Throughout the past two decades, the installations, paintings, photography, films, and public projects of Danish-Icelandic artist, Olafur Eliasson (b. 1967), have served as tools for exploring the cognitive and cultural conditions that inform our perception. Ranging from immersive environments of color, light, and movement to installations that recontextualize natural phenomena, his work defies the notion of art as an autonomous object and instead positions itself as part of an active exchange with the visitor and his or her individualized experience. Described by the artist as “devices for the experience of reality,” his individual works and projects prompt a greater sense of awareness about the ways we both interpret and co-produce the world. By recreating the

natural through artificial means and capturing it in both time and space, Eliasson’s work encourages the renegotiation of linear perceptions of space as well as the line between reality and representation. Eliasson’s Waterfall (2004) confronts fundamental perceptions of nature while addressing notions of space and movement. Using everyday industrial scaffolding and a system of plastic pumps that cycle the water, the artist evokes the site, sounds and rhythms of a natural waterfall, while also exposing the mechanics behind its construction and movement. Blurring the lines between the natural and constructed, this work invites viewers to reconsider their own experiences of nature, contemplating not just what they see, but how they see.

The Incredible World of Desire (Phragmipedium Sedenii) (2003 – 2004) evolved from a series of works that Quinn made using silicone to freeze real flowers, including various types of orchids, in perfect bloom. Of all plants, Quinn describes his fascination with orchids in particular: Orchids are like perfectly evolved little sculptures in themselves, they’re full of colour, interesting shapes and beauty. Even though they are a plant’s reproductive organs, they pun on human ones too. They make you realise it is colour, life and sexuality that keeps the Untitled 1991, 1991. Painted welded steel. 63 ½ x 60 x 72 inches (161 x 152 x 183 cm)

Artwork © Marc Quinn

The Incredible World of Desire (Phragmipedium Sedenii), 2003–2004 Weather resistant pigment, resin on stainless steel 231 x 102 x 2 ½ inches (587 x 260 x 6 cm)

Waterfall, 2004. Scaffolding, water, wood, foil, aluminum, pump, hose. 256 x 236 x 394 inches (7 x 6 x 10 m)

Artwork © Olafur Eliasson


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