Tom Sachs. [English Ed.]
Germano Celant - Malcolm Gladwell
Fondazione Prada
Milano, Fondazione Prada, April 7 - June 15, 2006.
Edited by Celant G.
Translation by Sartarelli S.
English Text.
Milano, 2018; bound, pp. 596, col. ill., cm 25x31.
ISBN: 88-87029-37-7 - EAN13: 9788887029376
Subject: Collections,Essays (Art or Architecture),Monographs (Painting and Drawing),Monographs (Sculpture and Decorative Arts),Photography
Period: 1960- Contemporary Period
Places: Italy
Languages:
Weight: 3.92 kg
For the other installation, Balaenoptera Musculus (2006), a life-sized reconstruction of an 18- metre long blue whale, Tom Sachs took his inspiration from the whale model hanging in the ocean life hall at the American Museum of Natural History, in New York. The whale, which, for its size, Sachs calls ?adolescent?, is made in foam core, cardboard, and white polyurethane foam, a material often used or architectural models. More than four months were needed to complete the entire structure and cover it with foam core sheeting laminated with hot silicon glue.
The third work, on show for the first time at the Fondazione Prada space, Untitled (1989 Chevy Caprice), 2006, is a police car that Sachs personalized with writing and equipped with a set of burglary tools.
Alongside the three big works, a series of other works is on display: five rifles made between 1994 and 2004, built with recycled materials and fully functioning, complete with safety catch;
Delinquency Chamber , a room endowed with every comfort, to which one can retreat to drink, smoke, sit down and play the videogame ?Grand Theft Auto?, a violent and realistic game set in the city of ?Los Santos?: inside are a refrigerator, a stereo system, a ventilation system to extract the smoke, and a waste bin; Untitled (McDonald?s Mop Bucket), 2003, made of foam core, painstakingly reproduces the bucket and mop ringer used for cleaning the floors of public spaces, while Electrolux (1999, foam core) is a replica of a vacuum cleaner. The artist, using a term from the musical world, calls these last two works ?dubs?: objects that really exist and are widely used, recreated by hand, often using recycled materials.