1000 words: Josiah McElheny; Talks about An End to Modernity and Conceptual Drawings for a Chandelier, 1965, both 2005.It's easy to love a Castiglione lamp. Harder, perhaps, to embrace without irony the more tricked-out artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. of modernism's schizophrenic dotage dot·age n. The loss of previously intact mental powers; senility. Also called anility. . Such Jetsons-era concoctions could scarcely be called "timeless," but for artist Josiah McElheny Josiah G. McElheny (born in 1966 in Boston) is a contemporary artist and sculptor, primarily known for his work with glass blowing and assemblages of glass and mirrored glassed objects (see glass art). He is a 2006 recipient of the MacArthur Fellows Program "genius grant". that's precisely their allure. McElheny has repeatedly gravitated toward a class of objects that show both their age and their Age, embodying as they do the often unresolved or inassimilable aesthetic aspirations of their historical milieu. He has taken as his subject not the Bauhaus's iconic Wagenfeld lamp but that design school's madcap Metal Party, not the hushed refinement of Mies or Brancusi, but the earnest delirium delirium Condition of disorientation, confused thinking, and rapid alternation between mental states. The patient is restless, cannot concentrate, and undergoes emotional changes (e.g., anxiety, apathy, euphoria), sometimes with hallucinations. of Fuller and Noguchi, not Castiglione's elegant Arco lamp, but Lobmeyr's 1965 Sputnik-glam chandeliers for the Metropolitan Opera House in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . This latest project, McElheny's most ambitious ever, is now on view in "Part Object Part Sculpture," the inaugural exhibition at the refurbished Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus, Ohio Columbus is the capital and the largest city of the American state of Ohio. Named for explorer Christopher Columbus, the city was founded in 1812 at the confluence of the Scioto and Olentangy rivers, and assumed the functions of state capital in 1816. , which commissioned the work as part of its artist-in-residency program. His reimagining of the 1960s' big-bucks, big-bang aesthetic comprises two interrelated in·ter·re·late tr. & intr.v. in·ter·re·lat·ed, in·ter·re·lat·ing, in·ter·re·lates To place in or come into mutual relationship. in parts: a monumental fallen chandelier in glass and chrome (titled An End to Modernity) and a film merging animations of schematic drawings of the origin of the universe with footage of the Met's famed fixture (Conceptual Drawings for a Chandelier, 1965). Cosmology and interior design may make an improbable dyad dyad /dy·ad/ (di´ad) a double chromosome resulting from the halving of a tetrad. dy·ad n. 1. Two individuals or units regarded as a pair, such as a mother and a daughter. 2. , but McElheny has a beguiling knack for unbraiding and retying the threads of historical narratives, making us see our cultural production as the fusion--and, in his words, "confusion"--of the most unlikely of forces. ********** [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] SEVERAL YEARS AGO I started going to the Metropolitan Opera with friends and I was struck by the decor. It's an odd building in that it combines precepts of modern architecture with remnants of the nineteenth century, like lots of red velvet and gold leaf. I was particularly fascinated with the chandeliers, in part because I knew that they were perhaps the last great achievement of J. & L. Lobmeyr, the first glass company to work with modernist architects and designers like Adolf Loos Noun 1. Adolf Loos - Austrian architect (1870-1933) Loos . They're kind of Gilded gild 1 tr.v. gild·ed or gilt , gild·ing, gilds 1. To cover with or as if with a thin layer of gold. 2. To give an often deceptively attractive or improved appearance to. 3. Age/space-age objects, and they immediately looked to me like a galaxy or an explosion--a Pop image of the big bang big bang Model of the origin of the universe, which holds that it emerged from a state of extremely high temperature and density in an explosive expansion 10 billion–15 billion years ago. . And just like the theater itself, they seem to have come from this weird transitional moment where modernism became infected with other influences. The spherical crystals feel of their time, for example, but they're also faceted and prismatic pris·mat·ic also pris·mat·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, resembling, or being a prism. 2. Formed by refraction of light through a prism. Used of a spectrum of light. 3. Brilliantly colored; iridescent. , which lends them a nineteenth-century opulence. My initial thought was that it would be amazing to remake this object as a sculpture that had literally fallen from its normal space so that you could look at it up close, but also to modernize it by toning down its highly sparkling quality. In a way it would be like modernizing the end of modernism--but also creating an image of its explosive demise. Since the original chandelier already suggested the idea of the big bang, it led me to ask, "What if I remade re·made v. Past tense and past participle of remake. the chandelier so that instead of it being a gloss on the theory, all of the decisions were determined by the actual science of the origin of the universe?" About five years ago I began to discuss this idea with people at MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology , but the project really moved forward when I met the cosmologist David Weinberg. We ultimately realized that the sculpture could make a correlation between two important things. One is that the history of the big bang is just that, a history, and although it's impossible to really draw a picture of the universe at any given moment, it is possible to ask what kinds of basic structures were being formed two, or seven, or ten billion years ago. So the first decision we made was that the length of each rod would represent a certain amount of time, and at the end of each one the arrangement of the glass pieces would show what kinds of galaxy formations were happening at the corresponding moment. The second thing that the sculpture depicts in terms of science is the beautiful idea of the isotropic Refers to properties that do not differ no matter which direction is measured. For example, an isotropic antenna radiates almost the same power in all directions. In practice, antennas cannot be 100% isotropic. nature of the universe, which essentially means that any one place in the universe is just as likely to be as interesting or boring as any other. That's why it became important that the rods not come out in some kind of pattern but in a random way. A computer would randomly pick a point on the sphere, a length of rod, and then a rule-based version of the galactic cluster formations that would have appeared at that time. So the sculpture is like a 1960s manufactured object with its high-finish chrome surface, but it has a different level of complication and asymmetry--a specificity in terms of the lack of patterning--that's part of the atmosphere of the piece. The idea is not that the science would be legible to the viewer, but that injecting so much information would create more vectors for the audience to use and result in an altogether new kind of hybrid object. To execute the sculpture, I fabricated around one thousand glass pieces by hand and collaborated with a company in California that figured out a way to create the roughly five thousand metal parts. I also went to Vienna and the Czech Republic to research Lobmeyr. As it turns out, Hans Harald Rath rath (rä, räth), circular hill fort protected by earthworks, used by the ancient Irish in the pre-Christian era as a retreat in time of danger. , the owner of the company, came to New York in 1965 to present a set of designs for the chandeliers to Wallace K. Harrison, the Met's architect. Harrison rejected them all and handed him a book about galaxies and said, "I want something connected to this." And so Rath went back to his hotel and over the weekend came up with the basic design. There's even a picture in the Lobmeyr archive of a potato with toothpicks sticking out of it hanging in Harrison's model of the lobby. I didn't know any of this at the time I began my project, but one of the things that my work is most involved with is the way that ideas end up influencing all areas of cultural production, consciously or not. And it just so happens that 1965 was also the year of the discovery of cosmic background radiation cosmic background radiation Electromagnetic radiation, mostly in the microwave range, believed to be the highly redshifted residual effect (see redshift) of the explosion billions of years ago from which, according to the big-bang model, the universe was created. , the first physical evidence of the big bang, which made front-page news. The related film, Conceptual Drawings for a Chandelier, 1965, was shot in Super 16 at the Met and then the footage was combined with a series of animated drawings based on scientific attempts to diagram the big bang. What's interesting is that the drawings from these sources look almost like conceptualizations of the chandelier, so there's kind of a story arc to the film and you end up seeing the same idea from two sides. You can take the design milieu, and the more abstractly you look at it, the more complicated and full of content it becomes. On the other hand, you can also see that very sophisticated scientific notions result in visual abstractions with independent content of their own. Basically, the whole project exists at the intersection of specific concepts and abstract ones, of intentional and unintentional cultural products. And, finally, it's about how they all become interconnected and confused. |
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