The
U-M Museum of Art (UMMA) has
unveiled the exterior sculpture "Ave
Delirio" (2001),
just north of UMMA. It was
loaned by the artist courtesy
of Spacetime C.C. and the Hill
Gallery in Birmingham. The
site is where the museum's
new $35 million addition will
be built. The more than 17-foot-tall
steel and stainless steel piece
will be on view for approximately
18 months leading up to the
groundbreaking of the museum's
expansion and renovation project.
"Many
collectors and curators, myself
included, feel that Mark di
Suvero is one of the two most
important sculptors of the
second half of the 20th century," says
UMMA Director James Steward. "Mark
shares this museum's vision
of engaging everyoneand
particularly our studentsin
the world of the visual arts,
and I'm honored that Mark has
chosen to share his work with
us so generously."
Di
Suvero intends "Ave
Delirio," like
all his large-scale work, to
be viewed from a variety of
angles and positions, so the
artist pays careful attention
to composition, balance of
forms and capacity for movement.
Pedestrians and ambient activity
play an important role in experiencing
the piece.
Often
classified as an Abstract Expressionist
sculptor, di Suvero has described
his own work as "painting
in three dimensions." Exhibitions
of his sculpture have been
mounted in museums and galleries
around the world since the
1960s and his work is represented
in most of the world's leading
collections of modern art,
including the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, Museum of Modern
Art and the Whitney Museum
of American Art. (Photo
by Marcia Ledford, U-M
Photo Services)