Simone Leigh's bronze sculpture satellite is installed at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

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Simone Leigh's bronze sculpture satellite is installed at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Simone Leigh, Satellite (2022), installed in front of The Nancy and Rich Kinder Building at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Photography by Will Michels, site rendering by Shaun Dorris.



HOUSTON, TX.- Simone Leigh’s towering, 24-foot-high bronze Satellite (2022) has been installed at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, near the entry plaza of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building for modern and contemporary art. The MFAH is the first US museum to acquire and install this monumental bronze in a permanent display. The first edition of Satellite was the centerpiece of Simone Leigh’s project for the American Pavilion of the 59th Venice Biennale last year; Houston’s example is the second edition of this seminal work.

Satellite reflects forms found in the traditional D’mba (or nimba) headdresses created by the Baga peoples of Guinea, the ceremonial ladles of the Dan peoples, and vernacular traditions across the African Diaspora. With its evocations of maternity and dignity, the sculpture expresses the artist’s intent to honor the historically undervalued labor – both physical and intellectual – of Black women. “In order to tell the truth,” Leigh has stated, “you need to invent what might be missing from the archive, to collapse time, to concern yourself with issues of scale, to formally move things around in a way that reveals something more true than fact.”

Weighing nearly 6,000 pounds, Satellite is comprised of two elements: a torso with four supports and a disc-like head. After months of careful planning and site preparation, the day-long installation was coordinated by an experienced team of MFAH engineers, art handlers, and a crane operator. As a first step the lower portion was craned into place onto a reinforced, engineered cement slab and safely fastened with 16 anchors. Once this base was secured, the second component— measuring 10 feet across and weighing 2,980 pounds—was gently lowered into place.

Commented Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston: “I am certain that this powerful work will become an iconic presence in front of the Kinder Building. It is an honor to be the first U.S. museum to acquire Satellite and install it for permanent display, and we are thrilled to have Simone Leigh represented at the Sarofim Campus, where her extraordinary

work is in the company of recent monumental works by Ai Wei-Wei, El Anatsui, Carlos Cruz-Diez, Byung Hoon Choi, Ólafur Elíasson and Cristina Iglesias.”

Simone Leigh (b. Chicago, 1967)

Over the past two decades, Simone Leigh’s work in video, installation and ceramic and bronze sculpture has explored ideas of race, beauty and community in visual and material culture. Her art addresses a broad range of historical periods, geographies and traditions, with specific references to vernacular and hand-made processes from across the African diaspora.

Leigh is the subject of a nationally touring retrospective, organized by the ICA Boston for the Venice Biennale and currently at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. She has also been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (2019); Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2016); Studio Museum in Harlem in Marcus Garvey Park, New York (2016); Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas (with Chitra Ganesh, 2016); the New Museum, New York (2016); Creative Time and Weeksville Heritage Center, Brooklyn (2014); and The Kitchen, New York (2014). Leigh has been included in group exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2019); 10th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin (2018); New Museum, New York (2017); MoMA PS1 (2015); and Dak’ Art 11th Biennale of Contemporary African Art, Dakar, Senegal (2014). Her monumental sculpture “Brick
House” was installed on the High Line Plinth, New York City, from 2019 to 2021. In addition to Satellite at the MFAH, her work is also in the collections of The Whitney Museum of American Art and The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; The Art Institute of Chicago; and the ICA/Boston, among others.










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