Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Are Years What (for Marianne Moore)

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Year
  
1967 (1967)

Artist
  
Mark di Suvero

Owner
  
Smithsonian Institution

Type
  
Steel

Created
  
1967

Are Years What? (for Marianne Moore) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen992Are

Dimensions
  
12 m × 12 m × 9.1 m (40 ft × 40 ft × 30 ft)

Location
  
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C., United States

Similar
  
Mark di Suvero artwork, Other artwork

Are Years What? (for Marianne Moore) is a sculpture by American artist Mark di Suvero. It is in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, in Washington, D.C., United States. The sculpture is named after poet Marianne Moore's "What Are Years". Temporarily (through May 26, 2014), the sculpture has been relocated to San Francisco, as part of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's Mark di Suvero exhibition at Crissy Field.

Contents

Are years what philip glass


Description

This 10-ton sculpture is made of nine red-orange steel I-beams, welded together, with one section suspended as a giant mobile with wire, shaped like a "V".

Information

Are Years What? (for Marianne Moore) is signature of di Suvero's monumental early 1960s "open-work constructions." These works utilize cast-off construction materials like chains, metal bars, and ladders. This sculpture is the first that di Suvero built, from beginning to end, with I-beams and using a crane, solely by himself.

Acquisition & installation

Are Years What? was originally in the collection of the artist, then the collection of Enrico Martignoni of Winnemucca, Nevada. Hirshhorn director James Demetrion first saw the sculpture when it was on display in Brooklyn's Prospect Park. The sculpture was acquired by the Hirshhorn with funds from the Joseph H. Hirshhorn Purchase Fund, a gift from the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries, and by exchange of the di Suvero artwork ISIS, in 1999. The sculpture was installed on June 13, 1999, by crane into the museum's sculpture garden.

Reception

The dangling "V" shaped piece of the sculpture has been described as representing the prow of a ship, or, as by art critic Irving Sandler as a representation of di Suvero's family's maritime heritage in Venice. Sandler also stated that the acute angles have male and female associations, with the horizontal representing a penis and the vertical "V", a vagina, which di Suvero does not associate with the work. The "V" has also been suggested to represent birds in flight or a "V" for victory. Jayne Merkel believed that Are Years What? exploited the strengths of the I-beams yet "at the same time, he has made a piece that is graceful and well balanced - aesthetically pleasing and intriguing from a number of points of view." Upon the sculpture's installation at the Hirshhorn, The Washington Post received the work as "brilliant in conception," "prominent, beautiful and memorable. It lifts the heart and stays in the mind. It is a gift to the city and all who visit." Are Years What? is considered by some to be di Suvero's "breakthrough work."

Exhibition history

  • Solo show, 1997, Jeanne-Bucher Gallery, Paris
  • Solo show, 1995–1996, Storm King Art Center, Mountainville, New York
  • Solo show, 1995, Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy
  • Solo show, 1994–1995, Valencia Museum of Modern Art, Valencia, Spain
  • Mark di Suvero Retrospect, 1991, Museum of Modern Art, Nice
  • 1988, Wurttembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart, Germany
  • Prospect Park, 1975–1976, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York
  • Sculpture off the Pedestal, 1970s, Grand Rapids, Michigan
  • Plus by Minus, 1968, Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo, New York
  • References

    Are Years What? (for Marianne Moore) Wikipedia


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