Lecture

Subjective Histories of Sculpture III: Simon Starling

May 18, 2009

6:30–8:00pm ET

SculptureCenter
44-19 Purves Street
Long Island City, NY 11101

Sculpture is a medium-in-motion, eluding concise definition. As artists continuously re-invent its rules, materials, and conventions, we are challenged to incorporate new understandings of what, in fact, constitutes a sculpture. Linked to urbanism, architecture, and acoustic and visual perception, it is a charged territory that mirrors political, social and technological developments. As part of exploring how contemporary artists think about sculpture, SculptureCenter, in collaboration with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School, presents the third series in this partnership examining artist-led lectures alongside its exhibition program. In this series, established mid-career artists present specific works, bodies of work, texts, or even personal anecdotes, taken from inside and outside sculpture, and inside and outside art to tell their own story of sculptures history. These subjective, incomplete, partial, mis-remembered, or otherwise eclectic histories together examine sculptures evolving strategies, behaviors, dreams, and mistakes over the course of human civilization.

The third and final lecture in this series is delivered by British conceptual artist Simon Starling, winner of the 2005 Turner Prize.

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