The illusionist

Anish Kapoor at the ICA
By GREG COOK  |  June 6, 2008

080606_kapoor_main3
S-CURVE Kapoor evokes the sublime by deploying the sleight-of-hand and spectacle of carnival fun
houses and science-fiction special effects.

Slideshow: Images from "Anish Kapoor: Past, Present, Future."

"Kapoor speaks," by Greg Cook

“Anish Kapoor: Past, Present, Future” at the Institute of Contemporary Art | 100 Northern Ave, Boston | Through September 7

Over the winter, I made my third or fourth pilgrimage to Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate in Chicago. People there have affectionately nicknamed it the “Bean” because it resembles a giant floating bean of liquid mercury that’s drifted down into the middle of the downtown plaza from outer space. Bemused crowds stand around and stare and snap photos and giggle.

The 2004 sculpture is Kapoor’s masterpiece, and one of the best public sculptures in the country. It’s a metaphorical gateway arch to the city, tall enough for crowds of people to walk under. Like the best public art, it identifies and then embodies the meaning of its location — in this case a park that showcases the city’s skyline to one side and its lake shore on the other. The sculpture’s polished steel surface mirrors and frames and swallows these vistas, and the people standing around it, like, as a friend says, a giant snow globe turned inside out. The roof inside is concave and operates like a funhouse mirror, warping the reflections of the people underneath and seeming to funnel up into some portal to another dimension.

“The modernist tradition in form is mostly phallic, mostly upward and onward, and it leads to the rocket and the spaceship,” the London artist told me at the Institute of Contemporary Art last week, where “Anish Kapoor: Past, Present, Future,” which is billed as his first major US survey in 15 years, opened on Friday. “I have a feeling that the truly modern — meaning modern of today — the ultramodern form is inside out. And I’m trying to look for it. I try to look for inside-out forms. If one could say there’s a shape to the Internet, I’d say it was inside out. Or rather, involuting.”

The 14 works here — 10 of which, according to the ICA, have never been exhibited in this country before — lay out Kapoor’s primary motifs: velvety pigment-covered geometric and architectural forms, which he focused on from the late ’70s to the mid ’80s; voids or black holes, which became a focus in the mid ’80s; magic mirrors and resin blocks with Rorschach-test bubbles trapped inside, which enter his work in the mid ’90s; and big blobs of sticky red gunk that he’s produced this decade. They’re not as astonishing as the Chicago sculpture (what could be?) but they’re quite fetching.

cloudgateinside1.jpg
Cloud Gate: LOCATION/DATE Chicago 2004, PROJECT RUNNER-UP Jeff Koons, INSPIRATION l
iquid mercury, COMPOSITION stainless-steel plates, HEIGHT 33 feet, WIDTH 66 feet, HEIGHT OF
“GATE” 12 feet, WEIGHT 110 tons, COST $23 million


Kapoor was born in India in 1954 and grew up there. Some detect Indian accents in his work — the elemental geometric forms of an 18th-century Indian astronomical observatory, the vermilion smeared on statues in roadside shrines. But like most artists who came of age in the ’70s, he has as his first language is minimalism. He adheres to its practice of focusing on subtle relationships among simple objects, the viewer, and the space they share. Classic minimalism tends to be difficult, buttoned-up stuff predicated on the notion that if you concentrate on it hard enough and are worthy, you might discover transcendence. What sets Kapoor apart and makes him such a crowd pleaser is that he meets his audience more than halfway, deploying the sleight-of-hand and the spectacle of carnival funhouses and science-fiction special effects to evoke the sublime. This tactic has deep resonances: religions and governments have long used it to impress people, tapping our hardwired drive to invest mysterious forms — cathedral domes, the obelisk of the Washington monument — with major meaning.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Kapoor speaks, Styrofoam sorcery, A certain kind of disorientation, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Entertainment, Science and Technology, Culture and Lifestyle,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   A REALLY BIG SHOW!  |  May 21, 2013
    This showcase of tomorrow's-art-stars-today is both invigorating and overwhelming, with work by 194 students.
  •   CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN  |  May 13, 2013
    What does it mean to be a man? That's the question at the heart of this smart, sumptuous exhibit — one of the best shows in the region this year.
  •   MERRY PRANKSTERS  |  May 07, 2013
    Parked out front of Brown University's gray modernist Granoff Center on a recent sunny morning were one of those 15-foot-tall inflatable rats that unions install in front of businesses they're protesting and a limousine sloppily painted to resemble a yellow and black school bus.
  •   ALTERED IMAGES  |  April 30, 2013
    Among the handsome Washington Street storefronts of AS220's renovated Mercantile Block building, with their neo-old-timey signs, is the residents' entrance to the building. It is against AS220's religion to leave any space empty that can be filled with art. So the lobby is the AS220 Resident Gallery, which occupants of the building take turns filling with their stuff.
  •   IN THE CITY  |  April 23, 2013
    One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Providence art scene is how the city itself has been such a rich subject. A decade ago, the city became a galvanizing topic as artists fought to protect the old mills that served as their homes and studios from demolition — with mixed success. But lately, the community's industrial architecture itself has attracted artists' attention.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK