WASHINGTON, DC.- This summer,
The Phillips Collection presents the work of German artist Bettina Pousttchi, which addresses the history and memory of architecture. Double Monuments is part of the Phillipss ongoing Intersections series that highlights contemporary art and artists in conversation with the museums permanent collection, history, and architecture.
Through photography and sculpture, Pousttchi is interested in altering architectural buildings and monuments as indicators of the past and media of remembrance. In her series Double Monuments for Flavin and Tatlin (20102016), Pousttchi transforms the constraining materials of rails, street barricades, and metal crowd barriers into sculptural forms with spiraling vertical towers and neon light tubes. These double monuments reference the work of Russian Constructivist sculptor-architect Vladimir Tatlin from the 1920s and American minimalist artist Dan Flavin from the 1960s.
Five Double Monuments, ranging from 5 to 12 feet, are on view at the Phillips, dramatically illuminating the space with neon lights. The sculptures have been paired with works from the permanent collection including Naum Gabos Linear Structure in Space No. 1 (1943), and black and white photographs from the 1930s and 1940s by Berenice Abbott, Louis Faurer, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Gjon Mill, and Brett Westonimages that underline the theme of illuminated space presented in Pousttchi and Gabos works.
Best known for his architectural sculptures that emphasize translucency and suggest skyscrapers and industrial settings, Gabo creates work with a strong kinship to Russian constructivism, a movement which sought to overcome the static aspect of traditional sculpture, and activate the surrounding space. Just as Gabo used glass, metal, and plastic to create fluid, almost transparent sculptures that emphasizes space, line, and movement, Pousttchi employs materials such as neon and powder-coated objects to create installations that address both sculptural form and architectural setting.
Double Monuments is exhibited concurrently with the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Gardens World Time Clock series, a group of photographs Pousttchi created in 24 time zones around the globe over the last eight years. Together, these two exhibitions represent Pousttchis first museum presentations on the east coast of the United States.
Born in Mainz, Germany, in 1971, Bettina Pousttchi is a Berlin-based artist working in photography, video, and sculpture. She studied at the Kunstackademie Düsseldorf and participated in the Independent Study Program at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York from 19992000. Pousttchis work has been displayed throughout Europe, including Amsterdam, Berlin, Köln, and London. She held her first U.S. solo exhibition at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, Texas, in 2014.
Double Monuments is on view June 9October 2, 2016.