
Denver Monoliths - Denver, CO
Posted by:
Outspoken1
N 39° 44.180 W 104° 59.302
13S E 500996 N 4398493
Quick Description: Denver Monoliths by Beverly Pepper
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 1/20/2008 9:28:05 AM
Waymark Code: WM30D9
Views: 81
Long Description:
Denver Monoliths by Beverly Pepper was commissioned earlier this
year with support from a private donor. This abstract, aggregate
sculpture—measuring 40 feet high and 12-1/2 feet in diameter—is one
of her most spectacular public sculptures anywhere. The plaque
reads:
Beverly Pepper
American, born 1924
Denver Monoliths 2005-2006
Composite cementitious material
Acquired through the generosity of
Jana and Fred Bartlit, 2006.64
"http://www1.cuny.edu/forum/?p=1145">Beverly Pepper initially
gained critical recognition for her stainless steel, Cor-ten, and
cast-iron sculptures of monumental scale and immense presence.
Throughout her career she has sought to harness sculpture’s
materials and techniques to innovative ends, challenge its formal
conventions, and, above all, to restore its communicative and
symbolic functions. Since the mid-1970s, Pepper’s determination to
create a more profound dialogue between sculpture and its natural
environment has led to an ongoing commitment to site-specific
projects of ever-increasing complexity. Whether of a public or a
private nature, each commission reflects the artist’s uncommon
sensitivity to the physical characteristics, activities, and
indigenous culture of the site.
Pepper has completed numerous environmental and site-specific
sculptures in the United States, Europe, and Asia. Included in the
exhibition are drawings, models, sculptures, and photographs
related to Amphisculpture (1975-76), created for the headquarters
of AT&T in rural New Jersey; Sol i Ombra (1986-91), a 115,000
square-foot park in Barcelona; Spazio Teatro Celle (1989-91), an
outdoor sculpture-theater near Pistoia; Palingenesis (1992-94), a
227-foot long cast-iron environmental piece in Zurich; Manhattan
Sentinels (1993-96), a magisterial group of cast-iron columns in
New York City’s Federal Plaza; Denver Monoliths (2005-06), two
massive vertical cast-stone elements commissioned as a counterpoint
to Daniel Libeskind’s new wing for the Denver Art Museum.
The Denver Art Museum is located in downtown Denver on 13th
Avenue between Broadway and Bannock. The Museum is open Tuesday
through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.;
Sunday noon to 5 p.m.; closed Mondays and most major holidays. The
Museum is open late on Wednesdays. Special pricing may apply to
featured exhibitions. For more information, call 720-865-5000 or
visit the Museum’s website at www.denverartmuseum.org. For
information in Spanish, call 720-913-0169.