WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS.- Contemporary artist Thomas Schüttes first full-scale architectural art installation in the United States, Thomas Schütte: Crystal, opened at the
Clark Art Institute on June 14, 2015. Schütte arrived at the unusual asymmetrical shape of Crystal, which was conceived specifically for its location on the Clarks Stone Hill trails, by imagining a small piece of crystal scaled up to architectural proportions.
Its thrilling that one of the most recognized artists working today has chosen the Clark as the site for his first architectural installation in the United States, said Michael Conforti, the Felda and Dena Hardymon Director of the Clark. The views from Stone Hill have attracted hikers and Clark visitors since the our opening sixty years ago and now these views can be experienced from inside the fascinating irregular space that Schütte has designed.
The structures interior is clad in wood, referencing the traditional materials of rural vernacular architecture; the outside is zinc-coated copper, a modern material representing contemporary means and methods. Crystal is located on a meadow near the top of Stone Hill, close to the woodlands edge. Visitors enter the structure through doors on the northwest side; the southeast side of the structure is open and frames a view of cherry and ash trees and the Hoosac mountain range behind them.
Crystal provides visitors the opportunity to reflect on how landscapes and places, including the Clarks campus, are constructed and preserved. The works unusual design does not clearly communicate its purpose, allowing visitors to construct their own meanings and functions for the structure and site.
Schüttes work is a persistent engagement with artistic forms that have been historicized and inherited. Through critical wit and formal invention, his sculptures of imagined persons have given new life to depictions of the body, said the exhibitions curator David Breslin, John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation Chief Curator, Menil Drawing Institute. With Crystal and other projects that blur the line between sculpture and architecture, Schütte similarly reimagines the history and purpose of built spaces and the worlds they create. It was a real joy to work with Thomas as he realized this project for the Clark and Williamstown.
Thomas Schütte (German, b. 1954) is best known for his public large-scale sculptures of figures that reimagine the role of statuary and monuments. The artists fascination with architecture as a kind of public sculpture that is both symbolic and practical complements his figurative practice and its exploration of the human form. Since the 1980s, Schütte has created a series of architectural models that conjure up spaces ranging from a tiny efficient home to a temple.
Schütte studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf where he studied under artists and art historians including Gerhard Richter, Daniel Buren, and Benjamin Buchloh. He has been the subject of important exhibitions at the Serpentine Galleries, the Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Dia Art Foundation, the Serralves Foundation, and others. His works are included in the permanent collections of major museums including the Tate Modern, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago.