Art

#Anish Kapoor #installation #sculpture #site-specific

Anish Kapoor’s ‘Untrue Unreal’ Dissolves Dichotomies Through Sculptural Interventions at Palazzo Strozzi

October 12, 2023

Grace Ebert

a massive hunk of red wax pushes through a doorway

“Svayambhu” (2007), wax and oil-based paint. All images © Anish Kapoor, courtesy of Palazzo Strozzi, shared with permission

Untrue Unreal exemplifies the questions British-Indian artist Anish Kapoor (previously) has grappled with throughout his career, particularly those surrounding space and perception. On view now at Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, the exhibition encompasses new and previously shown works that offer insight into the mainstays and evolution of the artist’s decades-long practice, along with his profound interest in materiality.

Opening the show is “Void Pavilion IV,” a sleek, white cubic structure nestled inside the Renaissance courtyard. Viewers are invited to walk through the stark, geometric form, which functions like a void, plunging them into a quiet, meditative space before venturing into the galleries. Inside are several of Kapoor’s earlier works, including the well-known “Svayambhu.” Sliding between two spaces and leaving gloopy clumps in its wake, the massive brick of red wax explores how architecture shapes materials and the relationship between matter and emptiness. Other works include the primary colored sculptures of “To Reflect an Intimate Part of the Red” and “Angel,” which probe the tension between the earthly and non, along with “Newborn,” a mirrored sphere evocative of the artist’s iconic “Cloud Gate” in downtown Chicago.

Dualities of all kinds—geometric and biomorphic, transience and permanence, concave and convex—characterize Kapoor’s work and emerge in the exhibition title. Considering how boundaries between two distinct objects or concepts dissolve, Kapoor explains about Untrue Unreal:

At this time of ultra-nationalism taking the world over, political fiction poses as the real and is blind to history. The real/unreal–true/untrue game is a trope of our times… I dare say that we have lost touch with human reality and that of our fellow comrades, a hundred million of whom wander the world as refugees. All this in blind ultra-nationalists’ indoctrination. Untrue–Unreal today. The artist’s role, according to me, is to look to the unknown or half-known. I have nothing to say. My truth is to trust in what I don’t know or half know, in this the Untrue/Unreal is a guide.

Untrue Unreal is on view through February 4, 2024. Find more of Kapoor’s work on Instagram.

 

a sleek white cube structure is nestled inside a renaissance courtyard

“Void Pavilion VII” (2023)

a massive red wax brick appears to slide through a doorway

“Svayambhu” (2007), wax and oil-based paint

a massive red wax brick pushes through a doorway

Detail of “Svayambhu” (2007), wax and oil-based paint

a large spherical mirrored sculpture rests on a pedestal with a mirrored shield in the background

“Newborn” (2019), stainless steel, 300 x 300 x 300 centimeters

a woman walks through a gallery with large bright blue stone like sculptures on the floor

“Angel” (1990), slate and pigment

geometric shapes in yellow and red rest on a wooden gallery floor

“To Reflect an Intimate Part of the Red” (1981), mixed media and pigment

a large bright red column extends from floor to ceiling

“Endless Column” (1992), mixed media

#Anish Kapoor #installation #sculpture #site-specific

 

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. You'll connect with a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, read articles and newsletters ad-free, sustain our interview series, get discounts and early access to our limited-edition print releases, and much more. Join now!

 

 

Also on Colossal

Related posts on Colossal about Anish Kapoor installation sculpture site-specific