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Nancy Rubins

Nancy Rubins (born 1952) is an American sculptor and installation artist. Her sculptural works are primarily composed of blooming arrangements of large rigid objects such as televisions, small appliances, camping and construction trailers, hot water heaters, mattresses, airplane parts, rowboats, kayaks, canoes, surfboards, and other objects. Works such as Big Edge at CityCenter in Las Vegas contain over 200 boat vessels. Stainless Steel, Aluminum, Monochrome I, Built to Live Anywhere, at Home Here, at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, contains 66 used aluminum boats and rises to a height of 30 ft.[2]

Nancy Rubins
Big Edge
Born1952 (age 71–72)
EducationMaryland Institute College of Art
University of California, Davis.
Known forSculpture, installation art, photography
SpouseChris Burden[1]
AwardsAmerican Academy of Arts & Letters, Academy Award in Art (2003)
Rockefeller Foundation Travel Award (1993)

Early life and career edit

Rubins was born in Naples, Texas. Her family moved to Cincinnati before settling in Tullahoma, Tennessee.[3] She studied at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, Maryland, where she received her BFA in 1974, and then at the University of California, Davis, where she received her MFA in 1976. Rubins taught at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, and Florida State University in Tallahassee, before moving to New York. In New York, along with teaching she ran a house painting business.[3] Rubins resides in Topanga, California, and taught at the University of California, Los Angeles, from 1982 to 2004.

Work edit

In college, Rubins worked primarily with clay, creating igloo-like sculptures out of mud, concrete, and straw.[4] She was inspired by the work of Peter Voulkos and Robert Arneson.[3] She ended up at UC Davis finishing her MFA and studying with Arneson.[3] Rubins avoided the characteristic permanence of ceramics with the constant disassembling of sculptures, collapsing her work back into the slip bucket or back into raw scraps. Her 1974 piece Mud Slip, Army-Surplus Canvas and Used Cups from Coffee Machine combined found materials with wet clay; it lasted only as long as the clay stayed wet. Her creation of unlikely assemblages grew as she began to incorporate more detritus and found materials into her work.[5]

After college, Rubins taught night classes at City College of San Francisco and scavenged the local Goodwill and Salvation Army stores in San Francisco, where she was living at the time, collecting nearly 300 television sets for 25 to 50 cents apiece.[4][3] In 1977 she taught for a year at Virginia Commonwealth University where she started working with used appliances.[3]

Rubins was privately commissioned to create her first public installation in 1980. Big Bil-Bored was a controversial artwork, voted "Ugliest Sculpture in Chicago" in a radio poll. Constructed of various discarded appliances, the installation towered forty-three feet high outside of the Cermak Plaza shopping center in Berwyn, Illinois.[6] Soon after, Rubins was offered a commission for another public installation. In 1982, the Washington Project for the Arts funded Rubins's Worlds Apart,[4] a forty-five foot tall temporary installation composed of abandoned appliances, concrete and steel rebar. Her work overlooked the Whitehurst Freeway, blocks from the Watergate Building in Washington D.C., and again caused controversy.[7] The sculpture was taken down as soon as the permit expired.[3] While in Washington Rubins was contacted by artist Charles Ray to teach at UCLA where she met Chris Burden.[3]

 
Big Bill Bored, 1980.

Rubins is perhaps best known for building sculptures out of salvaged airplane parts, such as an installation in 1995 for the Museum of Modern Art in New York; the piece weighed nearly 10,000 pounds.[8][9] Already by the mid-1980s she had begun regularly using abandoned airplane parts in her work. Her contact for the plane parts was Bill Huffman in the Mojave desert.[3] For durability, she chose aluminum, fiberglass and composites rather than wood.[8] Rubins collaborated with husband Chris Burden on a number of projects, including an installation called A Monument to Megalopolises Past and Future at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE) in 1987.

In the late 1980s Rubins started working with discarded mattresses which were inspired by pastries she saw in Vienna – both relate to dreams in her mind. In 1993 she made a sculpture of cakes and mattresses at UCLA. It was shown at Paul Kasmin Gallery in New York[3]

Boats entered Rubins' sculptural vocabulary in 2000s.[10]

Rubins also started working with assembling discarded cast- aluminum playground structures. Most of these structures were built out of melted down WWII materials. These pieces were shown at the Gagosian gallery in 2014.[11]

Aside from sculpture, Rubins is known for her large scale graphite drawings which resemble lead sheets.[3][12]

 
Pleasure Point projecting out from the roof at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jo lla. 2007

Exhibitions edit

Rubins's work has been shown internationally. Her solo museum exhibitions include those hosted by Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego (1994); The Museum of Modern Art, New York (1995); ARTPACE, San Antonio (1997); Miami Art Museum (1999); Fonds regional d'art contemporain de Bourgogne, France (2005); SculptureCenter, Long Island City, New York (2006); Lincoln Center, New York (2006); and Navy Pier, Chicago (2013).[13] In 1993, Rubins was invited to participate in the Venice Biennale. She was included in the Whitney Biennial that same year.[4]

Selected solo exhibitions edit

  • 2010: "Works for New Space, Stainless Steel, Aluminum, Monochrome I & II," Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills
    • "Skins, Structures, Landmasses," Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills
  • 2006: "A Big Pleasure Point," at Lincoln Center, New York with The Public Art Fund
    • "Collages," Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York
    • Sculpture Center, New York
  • 2005: FRAC Bourgogne, Dijon, France

"Small Forest," Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York

  • 2003: Fondation Cartier pour l'Art Contemporain, France
    • Neue Galerie, Graz, Austria
  • 2001: Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York
    • Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills

Public collections edit

Installations can be found in the public collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and the Eli Broad Foundation, Los Angeles.[14] Large scale, outdoor sculptures are on permanent display at institutions throughout the world, including the Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, Université Paris Diderot, Paris and on the University of Texas at Austin campus.[15]

Awards edit

Sculptures edit


References edit

  1. ^ Kennedy, Randy (6 September 2013). "The Balance of a Career". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Charlotte Hsu. "The Canoes Overhead: Nancy Rubins' Epic New Sculpture at the Albright-Knox Is Whatever You Make of It". Retrieved December 21, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k McKenna, Kristine (1994-08-28). "She's Big on the Art of Recycling There's no such thing as junk to Nancy Rubins, whose enormously ambitious sculptures defy gravity as they turn the world on end". Los Angeles Times (Pre-1997 Fulltext). p. 56. ISSN 0458-3035.
  4. ^ a b c d Elizabeth Hayt (May 2, 1999), Monuments of Junk Artfully Compacted New York Times.
  5. ^ Katherine Kanjo (1995). Nancy Rubins. Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego.
  6. ^ Big Bil-Bored
  7. ^ Duncan, Michael (April 1995). "Transient Monuments". Art In America.
  8. ^ a b Jori Finkel (June 25, 2006), A Bouquet of Boats Blooming at Lincoln Center New York Times.
  9. ^ Baker, R C (2005-02-15). "NANCY RUBINS". The Village Voice. Vol. 50, no. 6. pp. C78. ISSN 0042-6180.
  10. ^ Nancy Rubins: Skins, Structures, Landmasses, June 3 - July 9, 2010 Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles.
  11. ^ SCHWENDENER, MARTHA (1 August 2014). "Nancy Rubins". The New York Times. Vol. 163, no. 8/1/2014. pp. C23. ISSN 0362-4331.
  12. ^ Artner, Alan G (1995-03-24). "Nancy Rubins never discards a good idea". Chicago Tribune. p. 750. ISSN 1085-6706.
  13. ^ Nancy Rubins Gagosian Gallery.
  14. ^ . publicartfund.org. 2006. Archived from the original on November 8, 2011. Retrieved March 6, 2012.
  15. ^ "Monochrome for Austin". 21 January 2015.
  16. ^ "Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Acquires monumental Nancy Rubins Sculpture". e-flux. March 11, 2006. Retrieved March 6, 2012.
  17. ^ FINKEL, JORI (June 25, 2006). "A Bouquet of Boats Blooming at Lincoln Center". The New York Times. Retrieved March 6, 2012.
  18. ^ Dabkowski, Colin (June 17, 2011). "Albright-Knox canoes make waves". The Buffalo News. Retrieved March 6, 2012.

nancy, rubins, born, 1952, american, sculptor, installation, artist, sculptural, works, primarily, composed, blooming, arrangements, large, rigid, objects, such, televisions, small, appliances, camping, construction, trailers, water, heaters, mattresses, airpl. Nancy Rubins born 1952 is an American sculptor and installation artist Her sculptural works are primarily composed of blooming arrangements of large rigid objects such as televisions small appliances camping and construction trailers hot water heaters mattresses airplane parts rowboats kayaks canoes surfboards and other objects Works such as Big Edge at CityCenter in Las Vegas contain over 200 boat vessels Stainless Steel Aluminum Monochrome I Built to Live Anywhere at Home Here at the Albright Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo contains 66 used aluminum boats and rises to a height of 30 ft 2 Nancy RubinsBig EdgeBorn1952 age 71 72 Naples Texas USEducationMaryland Institute College of Art University of California Davis Known forSculpture installation art photographySpouseChris Burden 1 AwardsAmerican Academy of Arts amp Letters Academy Award in Art 2003 Rockefeller Foundation Travel Award 1993 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Work 3 Exhibitions 4 Selected solo exhibitions 5 Public collections 6 Awards 7 Sculptures 8 ReferencesEarly life and career editRubins was born in Naples Texas Her family moved to Cincinnati before settling in Tullahoma Tennessee 3 She studied at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore Maryland where she received her BFA in 1974 and then at the University of California Davis where she received her MFA in 1976 Rubins taught at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond and Florida State University in Tallahassee before moving to New York In New York along with teaching she ran a house painting business 3 Rubins resides in Topanga California and taught at the University of California Los Angeles from 1982 to 2004 Work editIn college Rubins worked primarily with clay creating igloo like sculptures out of mud concrete and straw 4 She was inspired by the work of Peter Voulkos and Robert Arneson 3 She ended up at UC Davis finishing her MFA and studying with Arneson 3 Rubins avoided the characteristic permanence of ceramics with the constant disassembling of sculptures collapsing her work back into the slip bucket or back into raw scraps Her 1974 piece Mud Slip Army Surplus Canvas and Used Cups from Coffee Machine combined found materials with wet clay it lasted only as long as the clay stayed wet Her creation of unlikely assemblages grew as she began to incorporate more detritus and found materials into her work 5 After college Rubins taught night classes at City College of San Francisco and scavenged the local Goodwill and Salvation Army stores in San Francisco where she was living at the time collecting nearly 300 television sets for 25 to 50 cents apiece 4 3 In 1977 she taught for a year at Virginia Commonwealth University where she started working with used appliances 3 Rubins was privately commissioned to create her first public installation in 1980 Big Bil Bored was a controversial artwork voted Ugliest Sculpture in Chicago in a radio poll Constructed of various discarded appliances the installation towered forty three feet high outside of the Cermak Plaza shopping center in Berwyn Illinois 6 Soon after Rubins was offered a commission for another public installation In 1982 the Washington Project for the Arts funded Rubins s Worlds Apart 4 a forty five foot tall temporary installation composed of abandoned appliances concrete and steel rebar Her work overlooked the Whitehurst Freeway blocks from the Watergate Building in Washington D C and again caused controversy 7 The sculpture was taken down as soon as the permit expired 3 While in Washington Rubins was contacted by artist Charles Ray to teach at UCLA where she met Chris Burden 3 nbsp Big Bill Bored 1980 Rubins is perhaps best known for building sculptures out of salvaged airplane parts such as an installation in 1995 for the Museum of Modern Art in New York the piece weighed nearly 10 000 pounds 8 9 Already by the mid 1980s she had begun regularly using abandoned airplane parts in her work Her contact for the plane parts was Bill Huffman in the Mojave desert 3 For durability she chose aluminum fiberglass and composites rather than wood 8 Rubins collaborated with husband Chris Burden on a number of projects including an installation called A Monument to Megalopolises Past and Future at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions LACE in 1987 In the late 1980s Rubins started working with discarded mattresses which were inspired by pastries she saw in Vienna both relate to dreams in her mind In 1993 she made a sculpture of cakes and mattresses at UCLA It was shown at Paul Kasmin Gallery in New York 3 Boats entered Rubins sculptural vocabulary in 2000s 10 Rubins also started working with assembling discarded cast aluminum playground structures Most of these structures were built out of melted down WWII materials These pieces were shown at the Gagosian gallery in 2014 11 Aside from sculpture Rubins is known for her large scale graphite drawings which resemble lead sheets 3 12 nbsp Pleasure Point projecting out from the roof at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego La Jo lla 2007Exhibitions editRubins s work has been shown internationally Her solo museum exhibitions include those hosted by Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego 1994 The Museum of Modern Art New York 1995 ARTPACE San Antonio 1997 Miami Art Museum 1999 Fonds regional d art contemporain de Bourgogne France 2005 SculptureCenter Long Island City New York 2006 Lincoln Center New York 2006 and Navy Pier Chicago 2013 13 In 1993 Rubins was invited to participate in the Venice Biennale She was included in the Whitney Biennial that same year 4 Selected solo exhibitions edit2010 Works for New Space Stainless Steel Aluminum Monochrome I amp II Gagosian Gallery Beverly Hills Skins Structures Landmasses Gagosian Gallery Beverly Hills 2006 A Big Pleasure Point at Lincoln Center New York with The Public Art Fund Collages Paul Kasmin Gallery New York Sculpture Center New York 2005 FRAC Bourgogne Dijon France Small Forest Paul Kasmin Gallery New York 2003 Fondation Cartier pour l Art Contemporain France Neue Galerie Graz Austria 2001 Paul Kasmin Gallery New York Gagosian Gallery Beverly HillsPublic collections editInstallations can be found in the public collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego the Museum of Modern Art New York the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Eli Broad Foundation Los Angeles 14 Large scale outdoor sculptures are on permanent display at institutions throughout the world including the Albright Knox Art Gallery Buffalo Universite Paris Diderot Paris and on the University of Texas at Austin campus 15 Awards editMaryland Institute College of Art Alumni Award 2000 Flintridge Foundation Visual Artist Award 1997 98 Rockefeller Foundation Travel Award 1993 The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Awards in Painting Sculpture Printmaking Photography and Craft Media 1991 Creative Artists Public Service Grant New York State Council for the Arts 1981 National Endowment for the Arts 1981 1980 1977 Sculptures editBig Bil Bored Berwyn IL 1980 Chas Stainless Steel Mark Thompson s Airplane Parts About 1000 Pounds of Stainless Steel Wire and Gagosian s Beverly Hills Space Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles Los Angeles CA 2001 Airplane Parts amp Hills Osterreichischer Skulpturenpark Austrian Sculpture Park Unterpremstatten 2003 Pleasure Point Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego San Diego CA 2006 16 Big Pleasure Point Lincoln Center New York NY 2006 17 Big Edge CityCenter Las Vegas NV 2009 Stainless Steel Aluminum Monochrome I Built to Live Anywhere at Home Here Albright Knox Art Gallery Buffalo NY 2011 18 Monochrome for Paris Esplanade Pierre Vidal Naquet Paris France 2013 References edit Kennedy Randy 6 September 2013 The Balance of a Career The New York Times Charlotte Hsu The Canoes Overhead Nancy Rubins Epic New Sculpture at the Albright Knox Is Whatever You Make of It Retrieved December 21 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k McKenna Kristine 1994 08 28 She s Big on the Art of Recycling There s no such thing as junk to Nancy Rubins whose enormously ambitious sculptures defy gravity as they turn the world on end Los Angeles Times Pre 1997 Fulltext p 56 ISSN 0458 3035 a b c d Elizabeth Hayt May 2 1999 Monuments of Junk Artfully Compacted New York Times Katherine Kanjo 1995 Nancy Rubins Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Big Bil Bored Duncan Michael April 1995 Transient Monuments Art In America a b Jori Finkel June 25 2006 A Bouquet of Boats Blooming at Lincoln Center New York Times Baker R C 2005 02 15 NANCY RUBINS The Village Voice Vol 50 no 6 pp C78 ISSN 0042 6180 Nancy Rubins Skins Structures Landmasses June 3 July 9 2010 Gagosian Gallery Los Angeles SCHWENDENER MARTHA 1 August 2014 Nancy Rubins The New York Times Vol 163 no 8 1 2014 pp C23 ISSN 0362 4331 Artner Alan G 1995 03 24 Nancy Rubins never discards a good idea Chicago Tribune p 750 ISSN 1085 6706 Nancy Rubins Gagosian Gallery Nancy Rubins Big Pleasure Point publicartfund org 2006 Archived from the original on November 8 2011 Retrieved March 6 2012 Monochrome for Austin 21 January 2015 Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Acquires monumental Nancy Rubins Sculpture e flux March 11 2006 Retrieved March 6 2012 FINKEL JORI June 25 2006 A Bouquet of Boats Blooming at Lincoln Center The New York Times Retrieved March 6 2012 Dabkowski Colin June 17 2011 Albright Knox canoes make waves The Buffalo News Retrieved March 6 2012 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nancy Rubins Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nancy Rubins amp oldid 1190642368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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