10 new cast-iron blockwork sculptures appeared at the top of the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s famous steps this week, the work of British artist Antony Gormley. A temporary installation that will be on view now through June 16, 2019, each sculpture is spaced evenly apart and together they’re titled STAND.
“STAND offers an opportunity to reflect on our status as urban animals, our common ground with the artworks, and how context influences our thinking,” the museum’s website reads. Ok…
Honestly, as much as I really like this installation, I can’t help but roll my eyes a bit at how it’s being sold to us. The museum’s overview of the piece goes on to read: “In these metal bodies, each over ten feet tall, Gormley has replaced anatomy with the language of architecture, using cantilevers, propping, and pier-and-lintel construction, the interplay of masses creating the balance of form and feeling.” What?!
Maybe it’s because I didn’t go to art school, but I mean this installation is clearly meant to represent the crowds that climb these stairs daily and pose/reflect at the top. Why is the museum making it so hard for me to care about this piece?
I wish I understood what the artist, the curator, and the museum actually thought about their installation and its location, but I can’t grab on to too much from their website’s overly processed copy. I don’t want to be talked down to with artist/ project/ curatorial statements, but please at least make some real effort to communicate with me, especially when your work is in the public space and meant for the masses.
Gah, I’m so bummed. I was so pumped to see and photograph this installation earlier this week. But when I started gathering the information to build this post today, I just got so annoyed. Am I alone? Feel free to comment, maybe I’m off base or missing something.












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