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Atmosphere and Environment XII by Louise Nevelson. Photo by Joe Mikuliak, courtesy of the Association for Public Art. |
Atmosphere and
Environment XII
… and click here for information on the wide variety of Philadelphia’s public art maintained by the Association for Public Art.
The Treasure: Atmosphere and Environment XII is an
18,000-pound masterpiece of modern sculpture.
Background: There
are two great sculptures in highly visible positions outside the west entrance
(that’s the side overlooking the Schuylkill
River —not the more iconic side with the
Rocky steps) of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. As you approach the west museum entrance, Social Consciousness, a 1954 bronze sculpture by Jacob Epstein, is
to your left. And to the right is our Save
America’s Treasures piece: Atmosphere and Environment XII by the
acclaimed American sculptor, Louise Nevelson (1899-1988).
Deinstallation of Atmosphere and Environment XII in 2005. Photo by Joe Mikuliak, courtesy of the Association for Public Art. |
Although labeled XII by Nevelson, this particular sculpture
is really the third in a series of four that runs from X through XIII. Each
subtly different, the four sculptures were created late in Nevelson’s career, at
a time when she was experimenting with monumental size and new materials like
Cor-Ten, a recently developed weathering steel. The first, Atmosphere and Environment X, was conceived in 1969 as a commission for Princeton University , followed by XI for Yale University , then XII
which was constructed in 1970 and purchased by Philadelphia ’s
Fairmount Park Art Association (now the Association for Public Art) in 1972,
and finally XIII for Scottsdale , Arizona .
“Environments” is a term that Nevelson frequently used to
refer to her famous collages. In the
1950s and 1960s, she constructed a wide variety of collages from wood and found
objects, creating intricate arrangements and then painting them a solid color—first
entirely black, then all white, with a brief “baroque” period of gold.
While the word “Environment” in the Atmosphere and Environment series refered back to her earlier works,
“Atmosphere” added something new to Nevelson’s art. “The landscape is the
atmosphere that fills the spaces of the steel environment,” she explained. “The
two together are the sculpture.” Unlike her earlier collages, this new series
of massive outdoor sculptures was created to interact with the changing world
around it—in her words, the atmosphere. The large scale of the works may have
been partly inspired by her interest in Mayan ruins and theater sets.
Like many modern artists, Nevelson embraced transience with
her Atmosphere and Environment
series. The atmosphere—the scenery viewed both behind and through the sculpture—would
inevitably change over time. The appearance of the steel would change as well,
as it developed a distinctive rust patina. But Nevelson would probably not have
predicted that the very structure of the sculpture would quickly become threatened
by “corrosion jacking,” with the buildup of corrosion materials actually moving
the sculpture’s box-shaped elements apart.
"Before treatment" image showing corrosion jacking on the box elements. Photo courtesy of the Association for Public Art. |
Objects conservator Sara Creange working on the project. Photo courtesy of the Association for Public Art. |
Other Recommended
Sites: The west entrance side of the Philadelphia Museum of Art
is a bucolic setting, with a terraced landscape that slopes down to the Schuylkill
River and the historic
Fairmount Water Works. The Philadelphia Museum of Art recently installed the Anne d’Harnoncourt Sculpture Garden on the west grounds, featuring works by Isamu Noguchi, Sol LeWitt,
Claes Oldenburg, Ellsworth Kelly, and others. Iroquois, a monumental sculpture by Mark di Suvero is located
nearby, just around the corner on the Benjamin
Franklin Parkway .
Conservators who worked on Atmosphere and Environment XII at the rededication service in 2007. Photo by Joe Mikuliak, courtesy of the Association for Public Art. |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Thursday: Bulgarian Macedonian National Educational and Cultural Center
© 2013 Lee Price
Atmosphere and Environment XII Has recently been relocated due to the construction project at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The sculpture has been reinstalled on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania near Franklin Field.
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