Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Installation view of Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder and Cady Noland, New York, Venus Over Manhattan, 2017
Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder + Cady Noland
curated by Sandra Antelo-Suarez
November 7 - December 22, 2017
Opening: Tuesday, November 7th, 6:00 - 8:00 pm
VENUS
980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10075
(New York, NY) – VENUS is pleased to present Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder + Cady Noland, an exhibition curated by Sandra Antelo-Suarez. Comprised of two seminal sculptures by each artist, the exhibition marks the first time works by Alexander Calder and Cady Noland have been presented together.
Kinetics of Violence enlists two radical yet divergent artists whose works confront issues of violence, either directly or indirectly, often through sculptures that employ literal or implied motion. Working over two decades apart, both Calder and Noland produced works amidst the violence of looming totalitarian regimes and brutal forms of social control that indict unchecked reserves of power, engaging in what curator Sandra Antelo-Suarez calls the “kinetics of violence.”
On view in the gallery is a rigorously focused presentation of four sculptures. Alexander Calder’s monumental standing mobile Rhombus (1972) – exhibited publicly here for the first time – is comprised of three massive black elements that constitute a base, from which a fourth element protrudes to support a massive red trapezoid, punctured at its center. The red mass spins when pushed, functioning like an updated guillotine that cuts through the gallery’s ceiling. Calder produced this work in France in 1972, the same year that he cosponsored a two-page spread in The New York Times to call for the impeachment of President Richard Nixon. Also on view in the gallery is Constellation (1943), which Calder produced in Connecticut during World War II. Comprised of seven hand-carved wooden forms connected by lengths of wire, the work reflects Calder’s support of the war effort, working with wood in order to conserve metal. Though Calder’s works do not directly engage with politics, Antelo-Suarez proposes an analysis that accounts for Calder’s activism and suggests a penetration of the political into his work, foregrounding the violence of his sculptures and underlining their relationship to military materials and destructive machines.
Cady Noland, working nearly two decades after Calder’s death, is known for her practice that critiques networks of power that often result in violence. Two of her rarely exhibited works are on view in the gallery, both of which telegraph a criticism of American power through their references to punishment, restraint, and control. Corral Gates (1989) – exhibited in America here for the first time – is comprised of two barriers made of tubular steel, which swing open and closed, and function as a barricade between two sections of the gallery. The piece references the containment of livestock, but drives pointedly at the brutality of containment in the history of American culture, specifically the American West, signaled by a leather stirrup and equestrian bridles that hang over the gate. Beyond Corral Gates, one of Noland’s most important works, Gibbet (1993-1994), is installed alone in the gallery, exhibited here for only the second time since it was first shown at Paula Cooper Gallery in 1994. The sculpture is comprised of a stockade with five holes to secure a person’s ankles, wrists, and neck, as well as a small bench to support them. The work is made of wood, aluminum, and an American flag, draped over the stockade and punctured with five holes, one of which removes a star on the flag. Gibbet recalls the stockades used for punishment in early American colonial towns, which also functioned as public warnings to those that might break the law, or transgress established social codes. Gibbet also suggests one held up for public scorn, and draped with the American flag, Noland’s work puts America on trial, scrutinizing its moral calculus that is so often used to justify forms of violence.
Though Calder’s work is often understood to be politically innocuous, on occasion it was used explicitly for political ends. In 1937, Calder was commissioned by architects Josep Lluís Sert and Luis Lacasa to create a fountain for the Spanish Pavilion at the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne, in Paris. “It was the intention of the Spanish government to make a feature in its exposition of the mercury mines of Almaden,” wrote Calder. Mercury Fountain was installed directly in front of Pablo Picasso’s Guernica, the artist’s monumental indictment of General Francisco Franco’s Fascist forces in the Spanish Civil War. Calder’s work flowed with mercury instead of water, in reference to and in support of the workers at Spain’s Almadén mercury mines, where workers fought Franco’s troops in the Spanish Civil War. During World War II, Calder attempted to join the American military as a camoufleur, intending to use his skills as an artist to contribute to the allied war effort. In the postwar period, Calder became a staunch critic of American foreign policy in the Cold War, cosigning an open letter in The New York Times headlined “America Needs a New Foreign Policy,” even as the United States continued to install his large-scale sculptures at its embassies around the world. In 1951, Calder’s apparently “communisitic” political sympathies were discussed in the United States Congress, and the McCarthy-era House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) monitored the artist thereafter. His political commitments grew stronger during the Vietnam War: Calder joined the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy as the chairman of Artists for SANE, attended numerous marches against the war in Washington, and produced posters for a host of anti-war groups. In 1966, Calder and his wife Louisa placed a full page anti-war advertisement in The New York Times calling for “A New Year, New World,” and in 1972, the Calders cosponsored a two-page spread in the Times calling for the impeachment of President Nixon. In perhaps his greatest act of dissidence, Calder refused President Ford’s attempt to award him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, on the grounds that he could not accept an award while conscientious objectors and deserters were denied amnesty. Even when President Ford tried to posthumously award Calder the medal, Louisa Calder declined to attend the ceremony.
Curator Sandra Antelo-Suarez states: “Symphonic silences, explosions and collisions reverberate throughout the triangle formed in this exhibition by Calder’s Rhombus and Constellation, and Noland’s Corral Gates, and Gibbet. Together the works indict our current scenario of ethical paralysis for its tyrannical confrontation and crises, yet which so many refused to see at the time.”
For further information about the exhibition and availability, please contact the gallery at info@venusovermanhattan.com
For all press inquiries related to the exhibition, please email press@venusovermanhattan.com
Alexander Calder
Constellation, 1943
painted steel wire, painted wood, and wood
25 x 21 x 6 3/4 in
63.5 x 53.3 x 17.15 cm
Alexander Calder
Rhombus, 1972
standing mobile – painted steel
129 x 80 x 115 3/4 in
327.6 x 203.2 x 294.0 cm
Cady Noland
Corral Gates, 1989
metal, leather, bullets, in two parts
overall: 23 5/8 x 161 7/16 in
overall: 60 x 410 cm
Cady Noland
Gibbet, 1993-1994
aluminum, wood, fabric
stocks: 60 1/4 x 56 1/4 x 8 in (153 x 142.9 x 20.3 cm)
stool: 21 x 21 x 11 1/2 in (53.3 x 53.3 x 29.2 cm)
"What’s great about this country,” Andy Warhol wrote in his 1975 tome, The Philosophy of Andy Warhol, “is that America started the tradition where the richest consumers buy essentially the same things as the poorest."
There is nothing intentionally beautiful or soothing in the gallery space, just an anticipation of the kinetics of violence in the air.
In its inaugural public showing, Alexander Calder’s large, late sculpture “Rhombus” (1972), currently on view at the Venus Over Manhattan gallery on Madison Avenue, anchors an exercise in curatorial theater.
While it's fair to wonder whether Noland, a former it girl of the late '80s art world, even belongs in the same room as Calder, the premise behind the pairing of their sculptures - that inert obejcts can embody the physical dynamics of violence - is interesting enough.
If contemporary art is a love story, then Cady Noland is the one who got away.
It’s a truism that capitalism can subsume and make profitable even the critics and criticism that would tear capitalism apart.
Kinetics of Violence: Alexander Calder + Cady Noland
curated by Sandra Antelo-Suarez