Gillian Wearing: Diane Arbus
Gilded monuments and bronze statues evoke the public art of a bygone era. We鈥檝e recently been reminded of the potent symbolic value they still hold. Gillian Wearing (b. 1963, Birmingham, England) has been fascinated by these sculptures since childhood. For her, there鈥檚 something uncanny about a human form that appears immovable and changeless in a public setting. Wearing has always made art about people, usually presented in unexpected ways, in photography, video, and more recently, sculpture.
Diane Arbus (1923-1971) is one of several artists Wearing counts among her key influences, or 鈥渟piritual family.鈥 The celebrated New York photographer, who took many of her best-known images in Central Park, nevertheless remains a surprising choice for a bronze monument. Wearing鈥檚 statue draws attention to the fact that few women are represented in this way, and even fewer visual artists. Who gets to be memorialized has become a lively public debate. Diane Arbus, installed temporarily at the entrance to Central Park, is one artist鈥檚 tribute to another. The presentation of the sculpture is unconventional: there鈥檚 no pedestal, the figure simply stands on the pavement. Like a photograph come to life, Wearing captures Arbus as she might have appeared, holding her distinctive Rolleiflex camera, gaze fixed on her next subject.
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Gilded monuments and bronze statues evoke the public art of a bygone era. We鈥檝e recently been reminded of the potent symbolic value they still hold. Gillian Wearing (b. 1963, Birmingham, England) has been fascinated by these sculptures since childhood. For her, there鈥檚 something uncanny about a human form that appears immovable and changeless in a public setting. Wearing has always made art about people, usually presented in unexpected ways, in photography, video, and more recently, sculpture.
Diane Arbus (1923-1971) is one of several artists Wearing counts among her key influences, or 鈥渟piritual family.鈥 The celebrated New York photographer, who took many of her best-known images in Central Park, nevertheless remains a surprising choice for a bronze monument. Wearing鈥檚 statue draws attention to the fact that few women are represented in this way, and even fewer visual artists. Who gets to be memorialized has become a lively public debate. Diane Arbus, installed temporarily at the entrance to Central Park, is one artist鈥檚 tribute to another. The presentation of the sculpture is unconventional: there鈥檚 no pedestal, the figure simply stands on the pavement. Like a photograph come to life, Wearing captures Arbus as she might have appeared, holding her distinctive Rolleiflex camera, gaze fixed on her next subject.
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