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WILMER WILSON IV
Across the blue concrete, red embers fly to me (diptych), 2018Scalable wall vinyl156 x 210 in.
156 x 168 in.
Dimensions variable, listed dimensions as installed hereCopyright The ArtistMonuments have been a recurring concern in Wilmer Wilson IV’s poetic investigations of public infrastructure. In an ongoing series, A Running Tour of Some Monuments, the artist snaps photographs of...Monuments have been a recurring concern in Wilmer Wilson IV’s poetic investigations of public infrastructure. In an ongoing series, A Running Tour of Some Monuments, the artist snaps photographs of various city icons without slowing his stride. To date, Wilson IV has captured monuments in Rome, Barcelona, London, Brussels, New Orleans and Philadelphia. The resulting images are blurred and disorienting portraits that subvert the iconic status of their subjects and obscure their infrastructural significance. Untrustworthy Ground takes this concept one step further by imagining the public return of monuments to a molten state of potential energy, manifesting their reunion with the streets they occupy.
"Monuments are an important part of shared cultural experience, and yet I think over time our definition of monuments has taken on a kind of crude weightiness, or immutability, or a high barrier of entry — There is a way in which monuments have taken on this shared sense that they require a lot of energy and time and resources to produce, and that plays cleanly into these more political senses or questions of, “who has access to resources? When?” And what that means for the history of monuments as they persist into the present moment. So, I have found myself returning to these attempts to find more improvisational, less resource-intensive ways of creating monuments, and also questioning how the monuments that we do have came to demand such resources from us as a group, as a shared cultural context, and how that might be adjusted to reflect a more complex social landscape." — Wilmer Wilson IVExhibitions
"Slim...you don't got the juice," Susan Inglett Gallery, NYC, 31 January 2019 - 16 March 2019.