Mark di Suvero's tallest sculpture unveiled at Storm King this summer
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Mark di Suvero's tallest sculpture unveiled at Storm King this summer
View of the south fields, all works by Mark di Suvero. Left to right: Figolu, 2005–11. Courtesy the artist and Spacetime C.C. E=MC2 , 1996-97. Courtesy the artist and Spacetime C.C. ©Mark di Suvero, courtesy the artist and Spacetime C.C., New York. Photo courtesy Storm King Art Center.



MOUNTAINVILLE, NY.- Storm King Art Center is presenting the first US exhibition of internationally renowned sculptor Mark di Suvero’s E=MC2 (1996-97), which at nearly 100 feet is the tallest sculpture by the American artist to date. Created in di Suvero’s studio in Chalon-sur-Soâne, France, E=MC2 (1996-97) was previously shown in Paris in 1997 as part of a two-year-long citywide exhibition of the artist’s work and has been on display in Valenciennes, France for the past 10 years.

Widely regarded as one of the most important American artists to emerge from the Abstract Expressionist era, di Suvero remains a prolific artist today with a career spanning more than sixty years. The exhibition of E=MC2 (1996-97) at Storm King continues an unparalleled five-decade-long dialogue between the artist and the Art Center. The new work, made from steel beams and standing nearly 100 feet tall, has been sited alongside eight other examples of di Suvero’s large-scale sculptures from various stages of his career currently on display in the South Fields and adds a new dimension to a historic vista at Storm King.

As one of the country’s preeminent sculptors, di Suvero’s work has been an integral part of Storm King Art Center’s permanent collection since 1968 when Ralph Ogden, one of Storm King’s co-founders, and the grandfather of current President John P. Stern, purchased the Art Center’s first di Suvero sculpture.

In 1976, Storm King Art Center became a temporary home to five of di Suvero’s large-scale works that had been exhibited throughout New York City’s five boroughs as part of the artist’s historic 1975 retrospective organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Since then, Storm King has collaborated with di Suvero on four landmark exhibitions including a twenty-five year retrospective of sculptures and drawings in 1985; a ten-year retrospective in 1995 and 1996 that included a group of di Suvero’s paintings shown in the United States for the first time; a unique exhibition highlighting di Suvero’s relationship with his longtime gallerist and friend Richard Bellamy in 2005 and 2006; and a major exhibition of outdoor works sited on Governors Island in New York in 2011 and 2012. Most recently, Storm King published the first comprehensive monograph of the artist in 2015.

Today Storm King’s permanent collection includes five works by Mark di Suvero including one of the artist’s most political works, Mother Peace (1969-1970) and Mon Père, Mon Père (1973-75), which was one of the original works loaned by the artist to Storm King after his 1975 Whitney retrospective and has since been acquired by the Art Center. The collection also includes Mozart’s Birthday (1989), Pyramidian (1987/1998), and Mahatma (1978-79), which was re-sited during the 2018 season to the Art Center’s North Woods.

Additional di Suvero works on view at Storm King currently include She (1977-78, on loan from a private collection), which is an example of the artist’s introduction of playful, moving elements to his steel sculptures, and more recent works including For Chris (1991, on loan from the artist and Spacetime, C.C., New York), Frog Legs (2002, on loan from the artist and Spacetime, C.C., New York) and Figolu (2005-11, on loan from the artist and Spacetime, C.C., New York).

In a recent interview with the artist documented by the Art Center as part of an Oral History archive, Mark di Suvero said, “Having a piece at Storm King is like having jewels in velvet. You look at it, and you feel the goodness of the landscape, of the sense of space, the sky that comes with it…”

David R. Collens, Storm King’s Director and Chief Curator, adds, “Di Suvero’s bold, open, steel sculptures and the broad expanses of Storm King seem made for each other—together they create a unique environment in which the dynamism of art and nature reinforce one another. We’re thrilled to add E=MC2 (1996-97) to the di Suvero works already on display at Storm King and offer our visitors a chance to experience this monumental work within the backdrop of our unique Hudson Valley landscape.”

Di Suvero’s E=MC2 (1996-97) will be a long-term loan to Storm King for three years from the artist and Spacetime C.C., New York.










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