May 21–September 20, 2011
Bluhm Family Terrace Overview: The
diverse work of Pae White engages art, architecture, and design to heighten the
experience of site and context. Growing up in the “modernist mecca” of Southern
California in the late 1960s and 1970s, White developed a visual vocabulary
drawn from a variety of influences that range from consumer culture to “high”
art—Eames furniture, Vera Neumann scarves, and Milton Glaser graphics, among
them.
Pae White. Restless Rainbow, 2011. Inkjet printed on vinyl. © Pae White. Restless Rainbow, a commissioned,
site-specific work for the Art Institute of Chicago’s Bluhm Family Terrace, uses this dramatic space not as a platform for objects but as the work
itself. In this piece, White drew on her interest in and knowledge of graphic
design, textiles, and animation to wrap the terrace in a vibrantly colored,
energetic abstracted rainbow. While planning for the installation, the artist
wondered: What would happen if a rainbow became disorganized—would it fall from
the sky? What if a rainbow misbehaved, causing its color spectrum to take on
new order? Would it include black, as rainbows in comic books often do? From the surface of the floor to the
tops of the glass walls, White’s work turns the Bluhm Sculpture Terrace into a
completely activated site in and of itself. Restless Rainbow inverts the traditional act of “looking out” from the
terrace—at the Chicago skyline, Millennium Park, and the lakefront—and instead
invites visitors to enjoy it as an immersive space, brought fully to life
through the use of color, line, and texture. White said, “I am not really
interested in the blurring of boundaries; it’s really more that there is an art
opportunity in all of these things. . . . In many ways it is about finding
these hidden zones.” The Bluhm Family Sculpture Terrace is just such a “hidden
zone.” Though highly visible, it is recognized more for what it presents than
for its own spatial dynamics. Restless Rainbow changes that equation, bringing the space to life
through a riot of color and play.
Organizer: This exhibition is organized by the Art Institute of Chicago with major funding from the Bluhm Family Endowment Fund. The Fund supports exhibitions of modern and contemporary sculpture, which may consist of existing works drawn from the Art Institute’s permanent collection or borrowed from other collections private and public, or new works commissioned specifically for this site. Generous support is provided by the Exhibitions Trust: Goldman Sachs, Kenneth and Anne Griffin, Thomas and Margot Pritzker, the Earl and Brenda Shapiro Foundation, Donna and Howard Stone, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sullivan, and an anonymous donor. |