 |
 |
David
Ireland, Angel-Go-Round, 1996,
installation view from exhibition at Oakland Museum of
California, 2003-04. Fiberglass and cast concrete figures,
motor, and nyon belting. 22 x 25 feet diameter. Courtesy
of the artist; Gallery Paule Anglim, San Francisco; Christopher
Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, California; and Jack Shainman
Gallery, New York. Photograph by: M. Lee Fatherree. |
"You
can’t make art by making art" has been a guiding principle
in the work of David Ireland, one of California's most important
and critically acclaimed artists working in the challenging arena
of conceptual and installation art. "Ideally my work has
a visual presence that makes it seem like part of a usual, everyday
situation," he says. "I like the feeling that nothing's
been designed, that you can't tell where the art stops and starts."
The Oakland
Museum of California exhibition surveys three decades
of the work of this key figure in the conceptual
art movement. The Art of David Ireland: The Way Things
Are, the first in-depth assessment of Ireland's
art and its ongoing significance, is on view to March 14, 2004.
The exhibition
features approximately 80 works created between 1972 and 2002,
including four large-scale installations, 30 sculptures and
47 two-dimensional pieces. Included is a wide range of work demonstrating
Ireland's adventuresome sense of creativity, from drawings
made
of cement and dirt to a motorized sculpture and a wooden chair
18 feet high. Ireland has been directly involved in the exhibition's
installation, "activating the space" and creating
relationships among his works of the past 30 years.
The exhibition
also includes a video program featuring Ireland and his home—a
San Francisco Victorian described by one writer as an "environmental-sculpture-in-progress"—and a reading room for visitors to learn more about the artist.
Oakland Mayor
Jerry Brown said of Ireland's work, "David Ireland is one
of this country's most influential conceptual artists, an artist
of the enigmatic commonplace whose provocative, idiosyncratic
art is like a Zen Koan. He makes us see that art is all around
us and we need only to stop and look.''
 |
David
Ireland, Big Reading Chair, 2003; Drywall and
paint; Courtesy of the artist; Gallery Paule Anglim, San
Francisco; Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, California;
and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York; photo by: M. Lee Fatherree. |
 |
Good
Hope, 1991 Copper, wire, broom, concrete, and wood
stool; Collection of University of California, Berkeley
Art Museum; purchase made possible by a bequest from
Therese Bonney, Class of 1916; photo by: Benjamin Blackwell. |
Over the past
30 years, David Ireland has produced a remarkable series of architectural
transformations, installations, objects and drawings that consistently
challenge viewers' everyday distinctions between art and non-art.
A self-described "post-discipline" artist guided by
Zen thought and postmodern aesthetics, Ireland moves fluidly
from making small drawings to creating sculptures as large as
houses. The exhibition features early two-dimensional works from
the 1970s, made of dirt, talcum and cement, that have been rarely
seen since they were created but are important in foreshadowing
Ireland's later work. More recent two- and three-dimensional
pieces reflect his wide-ranging interests, from exploration of
the phenomenon of chance to his interest in process and history.
One of the
artworks for which Ireland is perhaps best known is his home
in San Francisco. In 1975, he purchased a run-down Victorian
at 500 Capp Street and spent the next three years working on
it. While he did not initially intend to create a work of art,
he gradually began to perceive his actions in cleaning and
restoring the house as an artistic performance, equating his
moves with
those of any painter or sculptor. He approached his tasks —
stripping wallpaper, polishing floors, sanding trim and repairing
the sidewalk — with a deliberate respect and finesse that for
him fixed his actions firmly in the realm of art. When he repaired
the sidewalk in front of his home, Ireland videotaped it as
though it were an artistic performance. The house is filled with
sculptures
made out of "non-art" materials, including old brooms,
bent wire, cement and wet paper.
Ireland was born in Bellingham, Washington, in 1930. He received his bachelor's
degree in industrial design and printmaking from Oakland's California College
of Arts and Crafts in 1953. He returned to school in the early 1970s, studying
plastics technology and printmaking at Laney College and receiving a master
of fine arts degree in printmaking in 1974 from the San Francisco Art Institute.
His studio is currently located in Oakland.
He did not
fully commit himself to art until he was in his early 40s, after
traveling extensively around the world and working as an architectural
draftsman, carpenter, designer, businessman and African safari
guide. The exhibition looks at how these early life experiences
have been influential, resulting, for example, in the reference
to elephants in his works, the claiming of architecture as art,
and the open-ended sense of exploration that is the foundation
for his work.
 |
Other
Id, 1992 Branded alder wood, glass, metal, paint & pillow;
Collection of Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center for the
Visual Arts, Stanford
University, Stanford, California; Modern and Contemporary Art Fund,1998.109.a-d;
photo by: M. Lee Fatherree.
|
David Ireland's
work has been presented in more than 40 solo exhibitions, at
venues including the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Hirshhorn
Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington,
D.C.; The Museum of Modern Art and the New Museum of Contemporary
Art, New York. He has created major art projects and private
commissions in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Washington,
D.C., and other cities. His work is included in the permanent
collections of The Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum
of American Art in New York, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art,
Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Oakland Museum of California,
and the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum, among
others.
Curator of The
Art of David Ireland: The Way Things Are is
Karen Tsujimoto, senior curator of art at the Oakland Museum
of California. Ms. Tsujimoto has more than 25 years experience
in the organization of exhibitions of modern and contemporary
art, and in 1985 organized David Ireland: A Decade Documented,
1975-1985 for the University of California, Berkeley Art
Museum.
The
exhibition is accompanied by a 248-page catalog published by
The University
of California Press. The catalog contains 140 color and black-and-white
illustrations along with essays on the development and significance
of Ireland's work by the exhibition curator and Jennifer R. Gross,
Seymour H. Knox, Jr. Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at
the Yale University Art Gallery.The catalogue is
available in OMCA's online store.
The exhibition,
catalog and all public programs are made possible with generous
support from the Oakland Museum Women's Board; National Endowment
for the Arts; The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts,
New York; Ann Hatch and Paul Discoe; Paule Anglim; Agnes Bourne
and Dr. James Luebbers; Nancy and Steven Oliver; and Friends
of David Ireland.
Following
its premiere in Oakland, the exhibition will travel to the
Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, in Andover,
Massachusetts (April 17 - July 18, 2004); Sheldon Memorial
Art Gallery and Sculpture Garden, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
(August 21 - November 14, 2004); and Santa Barbara Museum of
Art (December 11, 2004 - March 15, 2005).
For
press information see www.museumca.org/press/
|