But wait ... you ain’t seen nothing yet ... and I mean that literally ...
Taylor Defoe writes in Artnet News that “An Italian Artist auctioned off an “Invisible Sculpture” for 15,000 Euros ($18,300). The sale took place in May at the Italian auction house Art-Rite. The 67-year-old artist Salvatore Garau sold an “Immaterial Sculpture”. Yes, no it doesn’t exist! Garau titled it “lo sono” (I am). In his defense, the artist quotes the Heisenberg uncertainty principle that nothing has a weight. It goes on but I will let you read that for yourself. Sorry, there is no illustration!
https://news.artnet.com/art-world/italian-artist-auctioned-off-invisible-sculpture-18300-literally-made-nothing-1976181
The buyer did get a certificate of authenticity and a set of instructions: the work, according to Garau, must be exhibited in a private house in a roughly five-by-five-foot space free of obstruction. The estimate was 6,-9,000 Euros and I wonder if there was a reserve, (a price below which a work of art at auction will be bought-in). Who is crazier, the artist, the buyer or me for writing about it?
It did, however, get me thinking about the absurd in art. I found an article by the editors of Artland Magazine titled “10 Controversial Artworks That Changed Art History”. Believe it or not Édouard Manet’s, “Le Dejeuner sur l’Herbe” of 1863, now in the Musée d’Orsay, scandalized the public by showing a nude woman in a public park with well dressed men, then scandalous, but hardly absurd.
Let us continue, what about Andy Warhol’s arguably most famous work of Campbell Soup cans showing every flavor on the cans. The original was painted in 1962 and can be found at the Museum of Modern Art. Later Warhol began to experiment with silkscreen prints and thus a number of these silkscreens exist.
Today this too is considered an iconic work.
Then there is an artist I continue to struggle with, Jackson Pollock. In his painting “Convergence” (1952), now in the Buffalo AKG Museum. For me it is at least colorful but his “Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)” from 1950 in the Metropolitan Museum is pretty much black and white and tan. Pollock is lauded today for these drip paintings but frankly if I had to live with one, I think I would go nuts. Where do they start and end? How can you step back from them or be enveloped by them such as Mark Rothko in the Rothko Chapel at the Menil in Houston.
Another work which we consider today to be art is a urinal which the artist, Marcel Duchamp titled “Fountain” (1917). Duchamp described it as "everyday objects raised to the dignity of a work of art by the artist's act of choice."
The original has been lost. However, a photograph by Alfred Stieglitz at 291 art gallery following the 1917 Society of Independent Artists exhibit kept the concept alive. In the 1950’s and 60’s Duchamp made 16 or 17 replicas, one of which can be found in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Returning to Garau’s “Invisible Sculpture” the concept is not new. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy states, “around the fifth century BCE in China, India, and Greece, philosophers turned from what is, to what is not (Sorensen 2022). Ever since, there has been commentary on omissions, holes, vacuums, and the possibility of an empty world.” Today’s astrophysicists tell us that there is dark matter which is invisible as it does not absorb, reflect or emit light. Far be it for me to say that Garau has not created a work of art!!!
Today this too is considered an iconic work.
The original has been lost. However, a photograph by Alfred Stieglitz at 291 art gallery following the 1917 Society of Independent Artists exhibit kept the concept alive. In the 1950’s and 60’s Duchamp made 16 or 17 replicas, one of which can be found in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Returning to Garau’s “Invisible Sculpture” the concept is not new. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy states, “around the fifth century BCE in China, India, and Greece, philosophers turned from what is, to what is not (Sorensen 2022). Ever since, there has been commentary on omissions, holes, vacuums, and the possibility of an empty world.” Today’s astrophysicists tell us that there is dark matter which is invisible as it does not absorb, reflect or emit light. Far be it for me to say that Garau has not created a work of art!!!