Crissy Field
In light of the closing of SFMOMA for its expansion, the museum is placing art “all around town”.
This exhibit of EIGHT of Mark Di Suvero’s massive metal sculptures is the first of the series. As much as I love and respect the curators of the SFMOMA, I have always felt that they never quite understood the subtleties of culling an exhibit down to its finer points.
This retrospective is no different. It is the opinion of this writer, that large sculpture should either overwhelm its environment so that it becomes the focal point, or is overwhelmed by its environment so that the eye focuses on the piece. In the case of this exhibit the sculptures not only compete with the background of road construction, but with each other.
None-the-less, local boy makes good is the point of this exhibit and it is well worth the visit if you are given the opportunity.
This piece is titled Dreamcatcher. Dreamcatcher is 55 feet high and normally resides at Storm King in New York. The piece was done from 2005 to 2012. There are four unusually high and symmetrical tilting beams joined at the top, where they blossom into an interlocked array of cut-out steel circles. Held horizontally to a stainless steel spire in the middle and above the circles is a giant hand of four splayed similar beams, joined at one end, which blow freely in the wind, “catching dreams”.
Storm King is one of America’s finest outdoor art galleries, and a space where large sculpture is given its true due by the vast open spaces that surround each piece.
You’re right – need more space, I have to get to Storm King one day!
Looking at these photos I have to agree with you… They do lose something by being grouped together like that. I don’t think I have ever been to Storm King either…will have to do something about that
Storm King is a must. Mile 53 on the New York State Thruway. I miss the days when you could glimpse it from the highway, before the trees and bushes that now obscure the view.