PAF Home Page
Home
Public Art Fund Press Release


 

For immediate release

Public Art Fund presents?

Mark Handforth's
Lamppost

At Doris C. Freedman Plaza in Central Park

April 24 - June 6, 2003

New York, New York - The Public Art Fund is pleased to present Mark Handforth's Lamppost, the first outdoor work in the artist's singular series of twisted lamppost sculptures. As its straightforward name suggests, Lamppost is a massive industrial streetlight - originally 45 feet tall - that is folded in two places so it rests on the ground, leaning on its five-point crown of red glowing lights. Sited at the southeast corner of Central Park, Lamppost retains some small part of its original function - lighting a public space - but does so in a way that is at once dramatic and humorous.

Mark Handforth's Lamppost pieces-a recurring subject throughout his career-are made from the same gigantic industrial fixtures that go almost unnoticed high above our heads on streets and highways. In his gallery and museum practice, Handforth has bent and twisted these unwieldy items into interior spaces, creating a contemporary response to Claes Oldenburg's oversized soft sculptures or even Tony Smith's angular constructions. But Lamppost is not simply a new twist on monumental Pop or Minimalist sculpture: Handforth's interest is in the ingrained cultural value of designed objects, and in exploring the possibility that a single object can exist simultaneously on sculptural, functional, and social levels.

At Doris C. Freedman Plaza, the large features of the grounded lamp seem absurd, bordering on surreal, as if Lamppost were an enigmatic prop leftover from a movie shoot. The red lights, which replace the more standard yellow sodium bulbs, produce an ethereal glow. In his wide ranging artistic practice, Handforth extracts utilitarian and found objects from everyday life, recasting them in new ways that emphasize their formal qualities. Viewing the world as full of limitless sculptural possibilities, Handforth has created works that improve upon treasured pop icons-as in Vespa Fountain (2001), a motorbike transformed into a misting fountain-and resuscitate junked technology, as in Dish (Social) (1996), a deactivated satellite dish turned communal lounge chair.

Lamppost will be on view daily at Doris C. Freedman Plaza, 60th Street and Fifth Avenue.

About the Artist
Mark Handforth has recently had solo exhibitions at the UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2002); Gavin Brown's enterprise, New York (2000, 2002); and the Galleria Franco Noero, Turin, Italy (2002). Born in Hong Kong in 1969, Handforth grew up in London and lives in Miami. He attended the Staatliche Hochschule fur Bildende Kunste, Stadelschule, Frankfurt am Main, Germany and the Slade School of Fine Art, London.

About Doris C. Freedman Plaza
Named for the founder of the Public Art Fund, Doris C. Freedman Plaza has been the site of 40 artist projects and commissions, featuring works by internationally known artists such as Jenny Holzer, Tony Smith and Juan Muñoz, and emerging artists such as Keith Edmier and Andrea Zittel.

About In the Public Realm
Mark Handforth's Lamppost is a project of the Public Art Fund program In the Public Realm, which is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, The New York State Council on the Arts, a State Agency, the City of New York Department of Cultural Affairs, the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President, The Greenwall Foundation, The Silverweed Foundation, The JPMorgan Chase Foundation, and friends of the Public Art Fund.

About the Public Art Fund
The Public Art Fund is New York's leading organizer of artists' projects, new commissions, installations and exhibitions in public spaces. With 25 years of experience and an international reputation, the Public Art Fund identifies, coordinates and realizes a diversity of major projects by both established and emerging artists in New York City. By bringing artworks outside the traditional context of museums and galleries, the Public Art Fund provides a unique platform for an unparalleled public encounter with the art of our time.

The Public Art Fund is a non-profit arts organization supported by generous contributions 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.

# # #

Contact:
Public Art Fund
tel: (212) 980-4575
e-mail: press@publicartfund.org

PAF Home Page
Home