Diana Al-Hadid is a Syrian-American artist who lives and works in New
York. Her sculptures take ‘towers’ as their central theme, drawing
together a wide variety of associations: power, wealth, technological
and urban development, ideas of progress and globalism. They are also –
both in legends such as the Tower of Babel, and reality, such as the
horrors of the World Trade Centre attacks – symbols of the problems of
cultural difference and conflict. Al-Hadid’s Tower of Infinite Problems
poses as a toppled skyscraper. Made from crude materials such as
plaster, Styrofoam, wax, and cardboard, her structure is a monument to
human fallibility. Sprawling on the floor like an imaginary
archaeological find, the sculpture places the viewer in a fictional role
as futuristic observer, mourning the tragic follies of a past (our
current) civilization. If viewed from the end, the two parts of the
structure converge in an optical illusion, creating a spiral vortex
suggesting a cyclical repetition of history. Al–Hadid’s geometric forms attempt to bridge mystical and scientific
understandings of the world. As intensely patterned and detailed
structures, her works draw from the traditions of Islamic art, where
abstract motifs are used to encourage contemplation of God’s infinite
wisdom. An ‘infinite wisdom’ that is also the focus of the particle
physics research being done at the Large Hadron Collider – a 17 mile
tunnel beneath the Swiss-French border – where scientists are attempting
to locate the “God Particle” by reproducing the Big Bang. In Self Melt the top section of the sculpture is based on Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s 1556 painting The Tower of Babel.
Presented upside down, the ziggurat becomes an inverted form, like an
hourglass turning back time, suggesting a reversal of cultural diaspora.
Through its rough hewn and barbaric appearance – reminiscent of a
geological formation or frozen asteroid - Self Melt points to a mythological point of origin, where diversity and itsconsequences are supernaturally preordained.
Al-Hadid has described her
work as "impossible architecture". All The Stops envisions a palatial
structure, utilising stylistic elements from a variety of incongruous
periods from medieval churches to futuristic stadiums. Shaping her work
like an upturned trumpet, musical references are found throughout the
piece: broken onceglorious columns are made from plastic recorders,
decorative tiers are shingled with tiny piano keys. The spindly
architecture suggests
the evasive quality of sound, with each level contributing to a
sense of harmonic rhythm. The building however, is presented as a ruin,
empty and desolate, its decrepit power culminating in an eerily silent
crescendo.
bronze, painted stainless steel
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