Sculpture Milwaukee 2019

By Sculpture Milwaukee

Sculpture Milwaukee is supported by private and public

Many of the works in the third year of Sculpture Milwaukee highlight the natural environment of Wisconsin Avenue as it bumbs against the built environment. This age old friction — nature versus human nature — yields surprising, humorous, and sometimes sorrowful moments.

Magical Thinking (2019) by Actual Size Artworks (Gail Simpson / Aris Georgiades)Sculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Marilu Knode
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Magical Thinking is a life-size up-turned top hat, part of any magician’s repertoire of tricks. A magician’s patter misdirects the audience's’ attention away from the slight-of-hand, allowing the magician to do any number of fantastical plays involving animals, cards or scarves. Actual Size Artworks’ piece takes on a more ominous tone because the bunny inside the hat is glowering at the world around her. Is the bunny angry because of the misdirection and sleight-of-hand happening in our political climate?

Magical Thinking (detail) (2019) by Actual Size Artworks (Gail Simpson / Aris Georgiades)Sculpture Milwaukee

Pensive (2013) by Radcliffe BaileySculpture Milwaukee

Pensive depicts African American writer, historian, sociologist, editor and activist W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963) in the position of Rodin’s iconic work The Thinker, originally designed in 1880 as the cornerstone for Rodin’s masterpiece The Gates of Hell. In Rodin’s version, The Thinker is 14th century Italian poet Dante Alighieri, author of The Divine Comedy, completed in 1320. Dante sits in his well-known position, contemplating the circles of hell as described in Christian theology.

Penguin (2018) by John BaldessariSculpture Milwaukee

Penguin, 2018, is a self-portrait, raising to the height of the artist. The work is a continuation of his self-portrait series of 1974, when the artist sought to conceal and distort his identity beyond recognition.

Penguin (detail) (2018) by John BaldessariSculpture Milwaukee

Penguin (2018) by John BaldessariSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Ruth Yasko
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Heavy Metal Stack of Six: Trichrome Blue (2016) by Angela BullochSculpture Milwaukee

Bulloch’s columns and totems refer to the work of early 20th century pioneering Romanian artist Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957), whose “endless column” freed sculpture from the confines of a pedestal.

Heavy Metal Stack of Six: Trichrome Blue (detail) (2016) by Angela BullochSculpture Milwaukee

We Are The Ones We've Been Waiting For and Empathy for Everyone (2018) by Sam DurantSculpture Milwaukee

In his series of commercial sign boxes, Durant isolates phrases in protest signs from events over the past few years.

While some of the signs are explicit, others are suggestive, transcending topical issues and considering patterns of human behavior.

Megan Holbrook
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Audio Tour by Beth Weirick
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Handy Warhol, Handy Darling (2019) by Haas BrothersSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Kristaleen Hernandez
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Handy Warhol, Handy Darling (detail) (2019) by Haas BrothersSculpture Milwaukee

While the Haas Brothers are active in the high-end art and design worlds, their roots lay in the ore ancient tradition of artisans creating the artful objects that populate daily life.

Hera (Half) (2018) by Tony MatelliSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Chelsea Holton
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Hera (Half) (detail) (2018) by Tony MatelliSculpture Milwaukee

Matelli’s Hera (half) shows the decaying human ideal against the tantalizing richness of the sweet fruit, culture versus nature as both decompose.

Hera (Half) (detail) (2018) by Tony MatelliSculpture Milwaukee

Matelli chooses his ancient figures because they represent decline—of human strength, perhaps of empire. This work plays with our sense of history and the brevity of life, and the human drive to preserve and record the past. Matelli brings this ancient figure to the 21st century, asking us to reflect on the meanings of this juxtaposition in our contemporary language.

Sun & Moon Protector (2016) by William J. O'BrienSculpture Milwaukee

Sun & Moon Protector, 2016, is part of O’Brien’s first foray into that most rigid and “high” of art materials, bronze. Sun & Moon Protector has the intense lines of a religious object, assembled with passion.

Sun & Moon Protector (detail) (2016) by William J. O'BrienSculpture Milwaukee

O’Brien’s work is deeply personal, influenced by self-reflection, his personal relationships and the world that touches him daily.

O'Brien keeps his hand visible in much of his work, and questions why certain materials are more acceptable as art.

Cleft from the series Dendroids (2018) by Roxy PaineSculpture Milwaukee

Roxy Paine is recognized as one of his generation’s most inventive conceptual artists, whose practice revolves around the impact of modern human technologies on nature, including human nature.

Cleft from the series Dendroids (looking up) (2018) by Roxy PaineSculpture Milwaukee

His Dendroids series of haunting silver trees, based on the branching, tree-like habits of cells.

Each branching “tree” is wildly unique, some grasping for the sun’s embrace, some, rooted stoically to a site that can no longer nourish them.

Cleft from the series Dendroids (2018) by Roxy PaineSculpture Milwaukee

As biologists reveal more about the complex network of communication and nutrient sharing that goes on underground between trees of one species, the more this brutalized tree evokes sympathy.

Curvae in Curvae (2013/2018) by Beverly PepperSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Boys and Girls Club of Greater Milwaukee
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Curvae in Curvae uses the Latin feminine word curvae, singular of curvus, or bent, curved.

Curvae in Curvae (2013/2018) by Beverly PepperSculpture Milwaukee

Pepper’s goal is to dominate the materials of the earth—metal and stone—so that they take on a personality and texture that runs counter to the neutral face of modern architecture.

Gild the Lily (Caribbean Hybrid I, II, III) (2019) by Carlos RolonSculpture Milwaukee

Adorning the Chase Bank's public atrium, Rolón's piece is one of the largest sculptural installations in the Midwest.

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Gild the Lily (Caribbean Hybrid I, II, III) (inside, looking north) (2019) by Carlos RolonSculpture Milwaukee

Gild the Lily (Caribbean Hybrid I, II, III) (detail) (2019) by Carlos RolonSculpture Milwaukee

The flowers are painted by Rolón then reproduced digitally for vinyl stickers.

Black Stacked Frames (2016) by Sean ScullySculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Ed Hanrahan
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Black Stacked Frames (detail) (2016) by Sean ScullySculpture Milwaukee

Tilted Channel from Full Steam Ahead (2018) by Arlene ShechetSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Marilu Knode
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Tilted Channel from Full Steam Ahead (detail) (2018) by Arlene ShechetSculpture Milwaukee

Holiday Home (Milwaukee) (2019) by Richard WoodsSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Great Lakes Community Conservation Corps
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Holiday Home (Milwaukee) (detail) (2019) by Richard WoodsSculpture Milwaukee

Richard Woods choose the color pallete specially for this Milwaukee home.

Kitchen Trees (2018) by B.WurtzSculpture Milwaukee

Audio Tour by Marilu Knode
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Kitchen Trees (detail) (2018) by B.WurtzSculpture Milwaukee

Credits: Story

Sculpture Milwaukee Curators:
Marilu Knode
Russel Bowman

Sculpture Milwaukee Founders:
Steve Marcus, Chairman, the Marcus Corporation
Beth Weirick, CEO, Milwaukee Downtown Inc.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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Milwaukee: Fiercely Independent, Wholly Unexpected
From custard to contemporary art, murals to Lake Michigan
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