Doug and Mike Starn commissioned to create monumental installation for Israel Museum's Billy Rose Art Garden
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, September 29, 2024


Doug and Mike Starn commissioned to create monumental installation for Israel Museum's Billy Rose Art Garden
The Starn Brothers look out at Big Bambu, Israel Museum. Photo: Elie Posner, Israel Museum.



JERUSALEM.- This summer, artists Doug and Mike Starn transform the landscape of the Israel Museum’s Billy Rose Art Garden with a monumental installation of bamboo and rope, towering 16 meters (52.5 feet) high and covering an area of more than 700 square meters (7,500 square feet). Opening to the public officially on June 16, visitors have been able to watch this immersive environment taking shape in the Garden since the end of April, as the Starn brothers and their team of rock climbers worked to construct the site-responsive installation and collaborate in the performative act of its creation. Composed of more than 10,000 bamboo poles, 5,000 Arms to Hold You, is being activated throughout the summer as visitors are invited to experience the work from within and without, ascending to its uppermost peaks and participating in cultural programming inspired by and performed within and around it. On view in its entirety through October 2014, the tower element that comprises the highest point of 5,000 Arms to Hold You will remain as a permanent sculptural installation in the Museum’s Garden.

“Set within the Noguchi-designed landscape of our Billy Rose Art Garden, and against the dramatic backdrop of Jerusalem’s broader landscape, 5,000 Arms to Hold You marks the first time the Starns have been commissioned to develop a work in their signature medium of bamboo in a setting without architectural constraint,” said James S. Snyder, the Anne and Jerome Fisher Director of the Israel Museum. “From the inception of its creation, Big Bambú has activated our Garden with the energy of its emerging form, representing through both experience and metaphor the Starns’ reflections on how chaos actually creates the order that is our lives. Through cultural programming and related artists’ projects throughout the summer, Big Bambú will become an even more dynamic setting that we hope will engage and inspire our audiences.”

The ninth work in the Starns’ Big Bambú series, 5,000 Arms to Hold You marks the largest and most complex sculptural installation undertaken by the artists to date. Its architecture builds upon the artists’ ongoing investigation of the interconnectedness of life, which serves as a foundational principal and guiding philosophy for their unique approach to making art.

“The concept of Big Bambú has nothing to do with bamboo,” said Mike Starn. "Big Bambú represents the invisible architecture of life and living things. It is the random interdependence of moments, trajectories intersecting, and actions becoming interaction, creating growth and change.” “It is philosophic engineering, a demonstration of chaotic interdependence," added Doug.

Beginning on June 16, visitors will be able to experience the sculpture’s inside and outside spaces, perching themselves on the elevated platforms that are part of its interior construction. Intended to be viewed from the inside looking out, as well as from the outside looking in, Big Bambú encourages visitors to explore their perception of the world around them from different vantage points throughout its interior. Its title refers to the web of bamboo that embraces visitors and is representative of the myriad connections that contribute to all individuals’ continual states of becoming.

5,000 Arms to Hold You is enlivened by visitors traversing its winding, intimate paths, encountering creative sculptural elements integrated within, and enjoying cultural programming that draws inspiration from the work. Beginning on July 10, visitors are able experience the work at night as it becomes illuminated with lights in conjunction with Contact Point, the Museum’s annual mid-summer night-long festival, during which artists and visitors engage with aspects of the Museum, its collections and its setting. During the month of August, 5,000 Arms to Hold You is further activated by visitors participating in the Museum’s annual Kite Festival on August 6 and its Wine Festival on August 11 through 14.

American artists and identical twins Doug and Mike Starn (born 1961) work collaboratively to create artworks that merge a range of traditionally separate mediums, among them photography, sculpture, and architecture. Beginning with their participation in the 1987 Whitney Biennial, the Starns became internationally known for their photography, which examines the concepts of chaos, interconnection, and interdependence. Over the past two and half decades, the Starns have pushed their practice into new mediums as evidenced in their Big Bambú series. The brothers debuted the first project in the series in 2010 in The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden, where it was the ninth most attended exhibition in the Museum’s history. They have since been commissioned to create site-responsive works in bamboo for the 2011 Venice Biennale; Museo d'arte contemporanea Roma (2013); and the Naoshima Museum in Japan (2013). In each country, the Starns create the installation in response to the venue to characterize the place in which it was constructed.










Today's News

June 17, 2014

Leicester presents designs for the tomb that will house the remains of King Richard III

Dazzle ship for Liverpool Biennial unveiled as part of 14-18 Now First World War commissions

Eugène Delacroix as focal point of major exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Christie's Out of the Ordinary 2014 Sale features rare and extraordinary works of art and objects

New galleries for ancient Egyptian art, Asian art, costume and textiles open at The RISD Museum

Théodore Géricault: Drawings, watercolors and small oils on view at Jill Newhouse Gallery

Georgia Museum of Art shows masterworks spanning 200 years of American art

Israel, Germany agree to coordinate the formation of joint data bases on Nazi-looted art

Simple Shapes: Over 200 artworks, from prehistoric to contemporary times, on view at Centre Pompidou-Metz

York's Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture helps bring historic buildings to life

Doug and Mike Starn commissioned to create monumental installation for Israel Museum's Billy Rose Art Garden

First major museum retrospective for Wynn Bullock mounted by High Museum of Art

Sotheby's Hong Kong gallery presents Xu Jianguo: Metropolis Reimagined, a selling exhibition

A "wild cherry" on top: Freeman's American Art & Pennsylvania Impressionists Auction results

A lifetimes collection of motoring sold for £3 million at Bonhams

Made in L.A. 2014: Second in an ongoing series of biennial exhibitions opens at the Hammer Museum

Solo exhibition of works by local ceramic artist Ronnie Gould opens at Lacoste Gallery

Flowering: Group exhibition opens at Nancy Margolis Gallery

Art from the Collection of Jonathan Green and Richard Weedan on view at the Morris Museum of Art

RBC announces finalists for the 16th Annual Canadian Painting Competition

Yinka Shonibare's installation in Chicago premieres three sculptures from his new Wind Series

Seven women artists create monumental sculptures for Riverside & Van Cortland Parks

Previously unseen portrait of London restaurateur Sally Clarke is unveiled




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful