The Art of David Ireland: The Way Things Are Who is DI? Oakland Museum of California
Exhibition


Sculpture of a Different Sort

Over the years, Ireland’s art has taken many forms, ranging from hand-sized pieces to works as large as a house. He built 65 Capp Street (1979–82), a sculpture/house that focused on the transitory nature of light. He has poured liquid cement down a ight of stairs and once salvaged huge slabs of concrete debris from a landfill to create a contemporary archaeological ruin. As these examples reveal, Ireland is fascinated by taking something mundane and creating a situation where it assumes a new identity.

Ireland also favors working with chairs. Sometimes he focuses on ordinary chairs; at other times he constructs them larger than life. With their tantalizing resemblance to sculpture, chairs allow Ireland to challenge our way of categorizing what is and is not art.

In the large chair created for this exhibition, Ireland has incorporated a reading room for visitors to study books and learn about his art. Upon entering the chair, viewers literally become part of the artwork and activate it by their presence. Here is a perfect example where art and life are fully merged.

Debris Pile: Debris from Past Exhibitions, 2003. Installation view from exhibition at Oakland Museum of California. Drywall, metal studs, and debris. 11 x 37 x 11 feet. Photograph by M. Lee Fatherree.

Reading Chair and Debris Pile: Debris from Past Exhibitions (detail), 2003. Installation view from exhibition at Oakland Museum of California. Photograph by M. Lee Fatherree.

More Exhibition Highlights:
<Process of Making Art <Artless Art <Life as Art <Curiosity as Sculpture
Sculpture of a Different Sort Keeping an Empty Mind> Dumbballs> Credits