Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Vault (sculpture)

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Type
  
abstract, minimalist

Artist
  
Ron Robertson-Swann

Year
  
1978

Medium
  
prefabricated steel

Created
  
1980

Vault (sculpture) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Southbank, Victoria, Australia

Similar
  
City Square - Melbourne, Australian Centre for Contemp, Larry La Trobe, Burnley Tunnel, Birrarung Marr - Melbourne

Mtg from the vault twenty unboxing


Vault (popularly known as the Yellow Peril) is a public sculpture located in Melbourne, Australia. The work of sculptor Ron Robertson-Swann, Vault is an abstract, minimalist sculpture built of large thick flat polygonal sheets of prefabricated steel, assembled in a way that suggests dynamic movement. It is painted yellow.

Contents

Presently located outside the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, it is a key work in Melbourne's public art collection, and of considerable historical importance to the city.

Vault has weathered much controversy throughout its existence. Commissioned by the Melbourne City Council after winning a competition in May 1978, for the newly built Melbourne City Square, the sculpture was not even built before it began to attract criticism from conservative media and council factions, on the grounds that its modern form was felt to be unsympathetic to the location. The cost of $70,000 was also felt to be excessive. The sculpture, which officially had no title until Robertson-Swann settled on Vault in September 1980, had previously referred to it as "The Thing"; the workmen who took more than eight weeks to construct it christened it "Steelhenge", was given the derogatory nickname "The Yellow Peril" by the newspapers, a name which has stuck.

Installed in the City Square in May 1980, Vault lasted until December of that year, when its dismantling coincided with the State Government's sacking of the City Council. The Builders Labourers Federation consequently placed bans on further City Square work projects.

Dr. Maurice White Director of Watirna Art Studio with partners John White and Kevin Bird were engaged to move the sculpture and in 1981 Vault was re-erected at Batman Park (named after John Batman) and remained there until 2002 when it was moved to the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Southbank.

Sculptor s vault norcat up start 2016 competition


References

Vault (sculpture) Wikipedia