Friday, 23 October 2015

Marc Quinn: Frozen Waves, Broken Sublimes at Somerset House


Four monumental sculptures by Marc Quinn will be presented in The Edmond J. Safra Fountain Court this September and October. Forming two bodies of work entitled Frozen Wave and Broken Sublime (2015), the sculptures originate from the remnants of shells. This installation is the first time the works will be presented outdoors and the sculptures will be amidst the courtyard’s fountains, underlining the works’ connection to water.

The Frozen Wave sculptures are minimal arcs in stainless steel, including one measuring 7.5 metres long. The works’ primal, gestural shapes originate from shells eroded by the endless action of the waves. Before they disappear and become sand, all conch shells end up in a similar form – an arch that looks like a wave, suggesting a self-portrait by nature. The Broken Sublime sculptures are modelled from shells which have been broken into by humans in order to eat the flesh inside and highlight how our relationship to nature is shaped by needs of the moment. Earlier this summer the sculptures were featured in Marc Quinn’s exhibition at White Cube, Bermondsey – ‘The Toxic Sublime’ - which explored the ecological impact of man on nature.

As Marc Quinn explains ‘Somerset House is a kind of urban beach of the Thames. Built on land which articulates the transition between the urban strand and the water of the river, it is the littoral zone of the city. By placing the cast stainless steel sculptures in the courtyard surrounded by the fountains, the water of the ocean which formed the sculptures’ shapes is linked to the tamed water of pipes, conduits and drains of the city’.

https://www.somersethouse.org.uk/visual-arts/marc-quinn-frozen-waves-broken-sublimes




 
 
 






 
 
I wasn't that amazed for a second, seeing these sculptures from the distance, but as I got much closer, I could appreciate them more. Magnificent, shining in the sun enormous shells and wave-like looking
shell's skeletons that an artist called a ''kind of a natural self-portrait of the water''. I couldn't really understand their purpose at first, but ones I have read some more information about this installation I fell in love with the concept (especially in connection with fountains that can go around them and splash it with water). It possibly makes people consider some of natural processes a bit more. To achieve that Marc Quinn made them in a great scale and by using stainless steel, he has shown their beauty in different perspective, letting them shine in the sunlight, producing unusual reflections.
 
I really appreciate that this days there is a lot of random installations and sculptures in the cities for everyone to admire and see. Enjoyable!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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