WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS.- The Clark Art Institute announces the first American installation of Le foglie delle radici (The Leaves of the Roots) (2011) by sculptor Giuseppe Penone (Italian, b. 1947, Garessio, Italy). The thirty-foot-tall cast bronze, steel, and soil sculpture of an upturned tree with a live eastern red cedar sapling growing from its inverted roots is a long-term installation on loan from a private collection and is situated on the lawn of the Clarks 1955 Museum Building.
The Clark is pleased to accept the long-term loan of this important sculpture by leading artist Giuseppe Penone, said Hardymon Director Olivier Meslay. The form of a treeencountered in a very unexpected wayresonates deeply with the Clarks commitment to stewardship of our grounds and natural setting.
Le foglie delle radici is the latest long-term contemporary art installation on the Clarks campus in recent years. In 2014, five carved stone benches by American artist Jenny Holzers Truism and Living series were placed near the reflecting pool to mark the opening of the Clark Center. In 2015, the site-specific commissioned work by Thomas Schütte, Crystal, a wood and metal structure in the shape of a human-scale geode, was fabricated at the top of Stone Hill, and in 2016, William Crovellos red granite sculpture Katana was installed just north of the main parking lot.
Giuseppe Penone lives and works in Turin, Italy, and uses objects from the natural world to explore the interconnected relationship between humans and nature. In the late 1960s, he was a proponent of the Arte Povera movement which used poor and unconventional materials such as soil or plant matter to evoke a preindustrial age and subtly critique systems of industrialization, mechanization, and art. Penones sculptural transformations draw the viewers attention to details that have long existed but are easily overlooked. By bringing the grandeuras well as the modesty and intimacyof raw but also cultural material into various settings, Penone raises questions about sculpture and its essence.
The artists work is held in collections including The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate, London; the Centre Pompidou, Paris; and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. Penone has an extensive history of major awards and exhibitions, most recently including the Musée de Grenoble (2014); Nasher Sculpture Center (2015); Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (2016); Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, Rome (2017); Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield; and Palais dIéna, Paris (both in 2019).
The artist has compared the process of creating the tree-formed Le foglie delle radici by the lost-wax process of bronze casting to the natural methods of capillary nourishment and formation of living trees. Perceiving its roots as its life center, or brain, the artist inverts the tree so that this brain now hovers some thirty feet above the ground and is a site of new growth as a living sapling thrusts its own roots into the virtual roots of the sculpture.
Le foglie delle radici exists in four versions. It has been displayed as Penone Versailles, Château de Versailles, from June 11 to October 30, 2013; Giuseppe Penone, Prospettiva vegetale, Forte di Belvedere and Giardino di Boboli, Florence, from July 5 to October 5, 2014; and Penone in the Rijksmuseum Gardens, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, from June 10 to October 2, 2016.