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Art Domantay, "Balsa Wood Airplane (The Land that Time Forgot)"   Photo: Tom Powell
Ken Landauer,  Untitled  ("Picnic Tables")   Photo: Tom Powell
Walter Martin & Paloma Muñoz,  "9 to 5"   Photo: Tom Powell
Peter Rostovsky,  "Monument"  Photo: Tom Powell Do-Ho Suh,  Maquette for "Public Figures"   Photo: Tom Powell Brian Tolle,  "Witch Catcher"   Photo: Tom Powell

 

MetroSpective : Art Domantay, Ken Landauer, Walter Martin & Paloma Muñoz, Peter Rostovsky, Do-Ho Suh, and Brian Tolle : Opening January 29, 2003 at City Hall Park

Public Art Fund and Forest City Ratner Companies is pleased to present an exhibition that brings contemporary art back to City Hall Park for the first time since 1992. MetroSpective celebrates ten years of Public Art Fund projects at MetroTech Center in downtown Brooklyn, revisiting six works that were first exhibited there. The retrospective at City Hall Park provides a new venue and audience for these seven artists: Art Domantay, Ken Landauer, Walter Martin & Paloma Muñoz, Peter Rostovsky, Do-Ho Suh, and Brian Tolle.

Click to Learn More About This Project    Art Domantay - Balsa Wood Airplane (The Land that Time Forgot)
In Balsa Wood Airplane: The Land That Time Forgot, Domantay has taken the familiar toy balsa-wood airplane and augmented it in scale from a tiny 12 inches to a giant proportion of 15 feet in length. The original iconic design of a balsa-wood toy airplane, a recognizable childhood object, has been faithfully rendered in every detail - from its torqued rubber band and giant metal clip to the "pre-flight" operating instructions located below the wings. Both the smallest child and the most sophisticated adult can relate to this toy's simple mechanism and its reference to the dream of flight. ...More about this project
   
Click to Learn More About This Project   Ken Landauer - Untitled (Picnic Tables)
From a distance, Picnic Tables appear to be like any two ordinary park picnic tables. Closer, they turn out to be super-sized versions of the originals, faithfully rendered with appropriately sized nuts, bolts and long two-plank benches. Those that take a seat may find themselves recalling the long-forgotten childhood experience of clambering up unwieldy objects to sit with feet dangling off the ground. Their disarming scale is exaggerated by a disproportionate relationship between height and length, a trick of perspective that leaves one guessing almost until last minute. ...More about this project
   
Click to Learn More About This Project   Walter Martin & Paloma Muñoz - 9 to 5
9 to 5, a sculpture installed on two of the park's trees, features beautiful bronze pears that appear to emerge from faucets and drop into awaiting buckets below. At once subtle and surreal, 9 to 5 seems to "tap" nature at its source, magically harvesting ripe fruit before it ever reaches the branch. The piece is an improbable twist on the intersection of manmade technology and nature. Its wry workaday title furthers the artists' commentary on the importance often placed upon streamlined productivity in our daily lives. ...More about this project
   
Click to Learn More About This Project   Peter Rostovsky - Monument
In Monument, a figure stands at the edge of a daunting precipice far above the head of the viewer, alone at the top of a dramatically jutting mountain. The tiny figure, dressed in a sports coat, is altogether ill-suited for the outdoors, as he peers gingerly from his perch looking out on the world around him. With its generic title and its faux-bronze appearance, Monument is in fact a monument to anyone and no one, dwelling on a state of mind instead of a person, place or thing. ...More about this project
   
Click to Learn More About This Project   Do-Ho Suh - Maquette for Public Figures
For the lobby of City Hall, Do-Ho Suh turns the traditional monument upside down with his small-scale maquette for Public Figures. Instead of a single figure perched on a pedestal, Suh creates a pedestal supported by myriad miniature anonymous male and female figures, refocusing the viewer's attention from the individual to the collective masses. Challenging the established notion of the common citizen revering a monument to an important figure, Suh emphasizes the power of the individual within public space. ...More about this project
     
Click to Learn More About This Project   Brian Tolle - Witch Catcher
Witch Catcher is a large-scale brick chimney, twisting 25 feet into the air, surrounded by the foundation of a depicted 17th century New England house. Witch Catcher suggests the archeological layering that occurs with urban development and, perhaps, serves as a reminder of how forgetful we can be. Witch Catcher combines fact, fiction and physical presence to invoke collective memory and spark curiosity for history's neglected corners. ...More about this project

Sponsorship
This exhibition and the ongoing Public Art Fund program at MetroTech Center are sponsored by the MetroTech Commons Associates, an organization that consists of MetroTech companies Bear Stearns & Company, Forest City Ratner Companies, KeySpan, JPMorganChase, Polytechnic University, Securities Industry Automation Corporation (SIAC), DOITT and E-911. Special thanks to First New York Management.

This exhibition is made possible through the cooperation of the Office of the Mayor of the City of New York and City of New York / Parks & Recreation, The Honorable Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor, and The Honorable Adrian Benepe, Commissioner, and William Castro, Manhattan Borough Commissioner, City of New York /Parks & Recreation.
Public Art Fund is a non-profit arts organization supported by generous gifts from individuals, foundations, and corporations, and with public funds from The New York State Council on the Arts, a State Agency, and the City of New York Department of Cultural Affairs.

Location
City Hall Park is bordered by Chambers Street, Broadway, Centre Street, and Park Row.
The nearest subway stations are A, C, E to Chambers Street; 4, 5, 6 to Brooklyn Bridge-City Hall; N, R to City Hall; 2,3 to Park Place.

click here to get directions from mapquest

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