heaven and earth
Today we met up with Kara, Lisa's new intern Sheri, her friend Boris, and went to the Anselm Kiefer show at the SFMOMA. This was the first museum exhibit I've been to since the accident. I brought the wheelchair and was glad I did -- this is exactly the kind of experience which would be impossible for me without wheels.
Lisa and I have seen Kiefer's work from time to time in the collections of art museums, but to see these sculptures and paintings together was fascinating. Wings fashioned from sheets of lead, the remnants of burnt books, star maps and enormous books (bound sheets of lead) are so rich in visual metaphor.
Oddly, one of our favorite parts of the exhibit was an interactive "book" displayed on a computer screen. The original is too fragile to handle but the pages of this virtual book can be turned by stroking the corner of the image with your finger as if you were turning the page of a real book. It was especially satisfying for Lisa who was going around the exhibit constantly fighting the urge to touch everything.
As a final surprise, when we reached the back cover of the "book," the credits contained the names of two people Lisa knew when she was in art school in Maryland. The world is this small.
Keifer's work, on the other hand is HUGE.
The book pictured above has got to be seven feet tall.
The book pictured above has got to be seven feet tall.
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Annalisa
http://tinyurl.com/ybxgwo
And the other is Tim Svenonius, who we didn't, but who is the brother of the infamous Thoralf.
Both are on staff of the SFMOMA.
I once babbled like a worshipping idiot when I called up Anselm Kiefer's hotel room when he stayed at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem in 1990. It was the year he started doing collaging on top of fighter jets. It became a controversy because the people who brought it into Israel didnt know if it was supposed to be catagorized as "art" or "military weaponry" and thus subjected to UN law. Mr Keifer was very polite to me on the phone, and then mysteriously forgot he knew English. Ah, well I would not how to deal well with the unwashed masses of the art world either if I became famous!!!
Annalisa
Annalisa
james