The Great Hall Exhibitions
Charles Simonds: Mental Earth
April 1, 2016 - May 13, 2016
The Institute of Fine Arts continued its ongoing Great Hall Exhibition Series by showcasing sculptor Charles Simonds’s Mental Earth in the Great Hall. The exhibit was organized by Institute of Fine Arts PhD student Julia Pelta Feldman, and was accompanied by a dialogue and day-long symposium featuring the artist .
A sculptor with roots in New York City’s downtown scene, Simonds first gained renown
as an artist in the 1970s for his
Dwellings
, miniature villages in unfired clay constructed in the streets of SoHo and the Lower East
Side and conceived as homes to an imaginary civilization that Simonds called “the
Little People.” He created over 200
Dwellings
, which usually disappeared days or weeks after their meticulous making. He has also
exhibited freestanding sculptures and installations at various institutional spaces,
including the Whitney Museum, the Paris and Venice Biennials, Documenta 6, and the Museum
of Modern Art. He has been the subject of retrospective exhibitions at the Guggenheim
Museum, the Galerie Nationale de Jeu de Paume, and the Institut Valencia d’Art
Moderne, among other museums.
"Created in 2003,
Mental Earth
is a hanging sculpture in which a vibrant arabesque of earthy clay forms – resembling at
once landscape, cloud, and man-made structure – floats in the air, detached from the
terrestrial and architectural context of Simonds's early work in the streets," said
Feldman, who also organized the upcoming all-day symposium on Simonds. "It is the opposite
of site-specific in that it is able to create a new site for itself wherever it is
exhibited. But despite this dramatic change from the artist's earlier work,
Mental Earth
represents powerful continuity with his entire oeuvre: it posits land, architecture, and
the human body as a unified, living, and growing form."
The IFA is deeply grateful for the generous support of the following donors to the Simonds Great Hall Exhibition and programming: The Agnes Gund Foundation; the Elizabeth A. Sackler Museum Educational Trust; Caroline Cummings Rafferty; and the Cummings Rafferty Family Fund of the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties.