Revered for the innovative visual art movement we now know as Pop Art, the Andy Warhol Museum commemorated its 25th anniversary with a black-tie seated dinner-and-cocktail gala this past October.
Daniel Arsham Partners With The Andy Warhol Museum For An Open Bidding
In an open bidding for contemporary art, the museum partnered with New York-based American artist, Daniel Arsham whose work exists in between art, architecture and performance. As the co-founder of âSnarkitectureâ, a collaborative practice investigating the unknown realms of architecture, Arsham is revered for âmaking architecture do things it is not supposed to doâ. His indefinable manipulation and reinterpretation of negative space within existing structures and material creates the illusion of objects through hollowness â swaying, melting or warping them into new objects.
His uchronic aesthetic, also known as, fictional archaeology, Arsham is venerable for creating âfuture relics of the presentâ, where eroded casts of modern artifacts and contemporary human figures are constructed out of sand, selenite or volcanic ash. Some of his most famous work include âPERPETUAL PRESENTâ, âCONNECTING TIMEâ and âHOURGLASSâ.
The Museumâs auction thus features, commissioned work by Arsham entitled âEroded Brillo Boxesâ which pays homage to Warholâs mid-1960s Brillo Box series. The replication of a popular 50âs soap pad product showcased Warholâs deep interest transforming average consumer products into art â a concept that remained consistent throughout his âCampbellâs Soup Cansâ and â3 Coke Bottlesâ paintings. The original construction of Warholâs work were purposefully indistinguishable from their supermarket counterparts, while Arsham personalizes his approach. Crafting blue calcite, quartz and hydro-stone boxes with his signature eroded aesthetic, Arsham intended for the finalized work to appear crystallized and calcified as though uncovered from a future archaeological site.
Daniel Arshamâs Eroded Brill Boxes will be up for sale at Sothebyâs Contemporary Art Day Auction on November 15th, alongside other impeccable work by Japanese philosopher Kazuya Sakai, the leader of the op art movement â Victor Vasarely and Chinese contemporary activity/artist, Ai WeiWei. Best known for his work entitled âSunflower Seedsâ in 2010, Ai WeiWei filled the enormous Turbine Hall of Londonâs Tate Modern with exactly 100,000,000 porcelain sunflower seeds, handmade by a Chinese, Jingdezhen craftsman. The work provokes a complex association to Chinaâs mass-manufacturing processes and the phrase âMade in Chinaâ. While connecting spectators to the Nationâs enriching history and culture, Ai WeiWei incorporates an important Chinese communist symbol (the sunflower seed) and the material (porcelain) which has long sustained the Chinese economy. His work is definitely one to look out for at the auction.
All proceeds from the sale will directly benefit the museumâs education and exhibition program, which sustains Andy Warholâs longstanding legacy of supporting living artists.
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