SculptureArt

10 items found

780549743588868096

“What I never wanted in art – and why I probably didn’t belong in art – was that I never wanted viewers. I think the basic condition of art is the viewer: The viewer is here, the art is there. So the viewer is in a position of desire and frustration. There were those Do Not Touch signs in a museum that are saying that the art is more expensive than the people. But I wanted users and a habitat. I don’t know if I would have used those words then, but I wanted inhabitants, participants. I wanted an interaction.” — Vito Acconci

In January 1972, Acconci staged one of the decade’s most notorious performance art pieces at the Sonnabend Gallery in SoHo. Gallery visitors entered to find the space empty except for a low wood ramp. Hidden below the ramp, out of sight, Acconci masturbated, basing his fantasies on the movements of the visitors above him. He narrated these fantasies aloud, his voice projected through speakers into the gallery: “you’re on my left … you’re moving away but I’m pushing my body against you, into the corner … you’re bending your head down, over me … I’m pressing my eyes into your hair.” Seedbed was a seminal work that transformed the physical space of the gallery through minimal intervention to create an intimate connection between artist and audience, even as they remained invisible to one another.

Vito Acconci
Seedbed
1972
Gelatin silver print
7 7/8 x 11 11/16 in.

777538580458422272

“An artist fights to retain the integrity of a work so that it remains a strong, clear vision. Art is and should be the act of an individual willing to say something new, something not quite familiar.”

Maya Lin
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, 1982
National Mall, Washington D.C.

Sponsor: Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund
Architect of Record: Cooper-Lecky Partnership
Landscape Architect: Henry Arnold
Photography: Terry Adams, Mark Segal, Victoria Sambunaris, Wendy Watriss

772557730057682944

“I was always an artist. I was a broker to earn a living, but I was always thinking about my art.”

Jeff Koons (B. 1955) 
Jim Beam – J.B. Turner Train 
stainless steel and bourbon 
11 x 114 x 6½ in. (27.9 x 289.6 x 16.5 cm.) 
Executed in 1986. This work is the artist’s proof from an edition of three plus one artist’s proof.
Price realised
USD 33,765,000