Contact:
Hiroko
Kikuchi
617.452.3586
hiroco@mit.edu
Original Architectural
Drawings and Prints
by Richard Fleischner
CAMBRIDGE, MAŃ May, 2006.
The DeanÕs Gallery presents Original Architectural Drawings and
Prints by Richard
Fleischner from May 19 to August 4, 2006.
The exhibition showcases original architectural drawings of FleischnerÕs
design for the plaza, completed in 1985, adjacent to MITÕs Wiesner Building,
home to the List Visual Arts Center and the Media Lab. The plaza includes pavers, benches, and
landscaping, all designed by Fleischner. Fleischner developed this work as part
of a Percent-for-Art Program collaboration with architect I.M. Pei (MIT Ō40)
who designed the Wiesner Building.
The Percent-for-Art Program, administered by the List Visual Arts
Center, allots money to commission art for each new building project or major
renovation. The program was
formally instituted in 1968, but earlier collaborations between artists and
architects can be found on the InstituteÕs campus. Other Percent-for-Art works include Dan GrahamÕs Yin/Yang
Pavilion in Simmons
Hall and Sarah SzeÕs recently installed Blue Poles in Sidney-Pacific Graduate Residence. Publicly sited art also include
sculptures by Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, and Pablo Picasso.
A total of 18 drawings are presented at the DeanÕs Gallery;
among them are two rendered perspective drawings and four cyanotypes. Most of
the drawings were done with graphite on vellum and yellow tracing paper. The series of drawings and studies
offer different variations on ideas and demonstrate FleischnerÕs thinking
process.
Richard Fleischner was born 1944 in New York and is based in Providence, Rhode Island. As a sculptor, painter, installation artist, and furniture maker, Fleischner began working environmentally in the 1970s. His sizeable body of work includes landscaping and large-scale public sculpture that emphasizes the relationship of man-made architecture and the natural world. Fleischner has used hay, sod, grass, and wooden structures to create universal architectural forms in a variety of natural settings. The maze, the corridor, the box, and the field are all cultural elements that have figured in Fleischner's work; these elements are utilized in combination with, and in contrast to, features in the natural environment such as trees, hills, sod, and other plants. His style tends towards the low-key and minimal, but he also draws inspiration from his knowledge of historical monumental sites, such as the Egyptian pyramids and Greek temples. The winner of numerous honors including three National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, Fleischner has created and shown his work all over the world.
Location:
The DeanÕs Gallery, the
MIT Sloan School of Management
50 Memorial Drive,
Building E52
Fourth Floor, Room 466
Cambridge, MA 02139
Gallery hours:
Monday - Friday 9:00 am to 5:00 pm; closed all holidays.
Information about the DeanÕs Gallery:
617.253.9458 or
http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/deansgallery
All exhibitions at the DeanÕs Gallery are free and open to
the public. Wheelchair accessible.