WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian American Art Museum announced that it has acquired three artworks from its popular exhibition WONDER1.8 Renwick (2015) by Janet Echelman, Folding the Chesapeake (2015) by Maya Lin and Volume (Renwick) (2015) by Leo Villareal.
WONDER, the debut exhibition at the recently reopened Renwick Gallery, featured immersive installations by nine leading contemporary artists. The artists were selected for their ability to dissolve the boundaries between craft, art and design, and for their focus on process and materials. Each selected a gallery in the Renwicks historic building and created an installation inspired by that space. More than 700,000 people have seen WONDER since it opened in November 2015; the exhibition closed July 10.
When we asked these exemplary artists to create something transformative, to create installations that would be truly out of the ordinary, we could not have imagined how successful the results would be, said Betsy Broun, The Margaret and Terry Stent Director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The works by Lin, Echelman and Villareal captured the imagination of our visitors no matter their age or knowledge of contemporary art. This sense of wonder is an experience that museums strive to create, and we are delighted to be able to acquire such a good selection from the exhibition.
Echelmans 1.8 Renwick is on view until early spring 2017, and Villareals Volume (Renwick) is expected to remain on view indefinitely. The installations by Lin and Echelman are artworks that can be reinstalled at another time. The future potential for displaying these three artworks were key factors in the decision to acquire them for the permanent collection.
Echelmans colorful fiber and textile installation, now titled 1.8 Renwick, fills the Bettie Rubenstein Grand Salon. The piece explores volumetric form without solid mass and examines the complex interconnections between human beings and the physical world. A massive, hand-knotted net echoing the map of energy released by the 2011 tsumani near Japan is suspended above a carpet reflecting topographic information about the sea floor below; the title references the number of microseconds by which the day was shortened as a result of the catastrophic event.
Lins Folding the Chesapeake, a cartographically accurate map of the Chesapeake Bay watershed, references her ongoing investigation into representing natural forms in her works and her commitment to environmental conservation. The materials she chose for the piece, industrial glass marbles, are an allusion to her fathers experiments in the fledgling studio-glass movement of the 1960s. The individual marbles evoke the thousands of separate yet interdependent species of flora and fauna comprising the bays delicate ecosystem. The artwork, no longer on view, spread across the floor and walls of a second-floor gallery at the Renwick.
Villareals light sculpture Volume (Renwick), installed above the Renwicks Grand Staircase, combines simple, utilitarian materials and forms with emerging technology to create a sensory, kinetic environment. An algorithm written by the artist creates patterns of light and dark at varying speeds that never repeat in exactly the same sequence with 23,000 LED bulbs embedded in mirrored steel rods. In the sculpture, binary code is transformed from an abstract series of 1s and 0s into a visual presence that is simultaneously physical and ephemeral, altering visitors perceptions of the surrounding space.
Volume (Renwick) was a gift to the museum from Janet and Jim Dicke, Tania and Tom Evans, Paula and Peter Lunder and Debbie Petersen in honor of Broun. Petersen also donated Folding the Chesapeake, while 1.8 Renwick was purchased for the museum through its patrons group, the American Art Forum.