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Installation view of Sandow Birk's work at art on paper, 2015
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Installation view of Sandow Birk's work at art on paper, 2015
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Sandow Birk
Proposal for a Monument to the NYPD from the series Imaginary Monuments, 2015
Ink on paper
60 x 42 inches unframed
64 ¼ x 46 1/16 inches framedMORE about this artworkThe idea for using historic texts as central elements in a series of fictional monuments initially developed from Birk’s interest in the etchings of Giovanni Battista Piranesi, an 18th century artist whose series of sixteen imaginary prisons combine dystopian architectural disarray with monumental interiors. Birk harkens on this inspiration in Proposal for a Monument to the NYPD, which depicts a monument set in a fictional Manhattan plaza, once respected and attended to, but now crumbling, forgotten, and teetering on the brink of collapse.
The fragile base of the monument, built from remnants of the World Trade Center, and covered with flowers and signs reading “Heroes” and “United We Stand,” is topped by the colossal weight of more recent events. In the upper section of the monument, Birk has inscribed texts from the NYPD Patrol Guide, which discuss appropriate gun use and situations sanctioning police use of deadly force. The central circular section of the monument presents the actual text banning police officers from using the chokehold. Use of the chokehold, however, played a part in the recent death of Staten Island resident Eric Garner. In 2014, a grand jury elected not to charge the officer involved with the incident. Subsequent public outcry spurred a pending federal investigation and demonstrations across the United States.
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SOLD
Sandow Birk
Proposal for a Monument to Christobal Colon from the series Imaginary Monuments, 2015
MORE about this artworkThis recent construction in the artist’s Imaginary Monuments series portrays a monument to the first letter sent by Christopher Columbus to Ferdinand and Isabella, King and Queen of Spain upon his arrival in the Americas, in which Columbus describes his discoveries from the famous 1492 royal voyage. The monument both pays homage to and critiques the age of exploration, and subsequent conquering, of the ‘New World.’ The drawing depicts a rough and rolling sea holding a ship with an enormous globe of the world as a sail. Droplets of blood slip off the curvature of an earth filled with trade routes crisscrossing the surface. A jeweled crown crests in the tumultuous waters, and an anchor falls unhooked to the ground and is repurposed as a clothing line by a nearby poverty-stricken village. Birk inscribes approximately three-quarters of the full text of the letter, dating to 1493. Interestingly, this version of Columbus’s missive represents one of three that were published upon the letter’s arrival in Spain due to its immediate popularity.
Medium: Ink and gouache on paper
Dimensions: 60 x 42 inches unframed, 64 ¼ x 46 1/16 inches framed
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Sandow Birk
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, from the series Imaginary Monuments, 2013, Edition of 25 + 8 proofs
Direct gravure etching on four copper plates printed on four sheets of handmade gampi paper, joined and backed with sekishu kozo paper
MORE about this artworkThis print, the second work in the Imaginary Monuments series, is the representation of a fictional monument to the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights—a document intended to solidify the belief in and commitment to basic human rights for all people. The historic pillar or column inscribed with the entire (legible) text of the United Nations’ document is based on the 1871 monument to Napoleon’s victory at the Place Vendôme in Paris. It is shown in a state of decay, as if its foundation were crumbling. The teetering pillar is supported by a makeshift system of pipes, scaffolding, and bamboo, and enclosed behind security fencing, making it inaccessible. The encircling cityscape spans the breadth of the globe, from the floating slums of Asia and shantytowns of Latin America and Africa in the foreground, to a skyline of iconic skyscrapers from international cities.
Co-published by Mullowney Printing and Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco
Medium: Direct gravure etching on four copper plates printed on four sheets of handmade gampi paper, joined and backed with sekishu kozo paper
Edition 25 + 8 proofs
Dimensions: 62 ½ x 48 inches unframed, 66 x 53 inches framed
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Sandow Birk
Monument to the Constitution of the United States in the series Imaginary Monuments, 2012
Direct gravure etching on nine copper plates printed on nine sheets of handmade gampi paper, joined and backed with sekishu kozo paper
Edition of 25 + 8 proofs: edition 13/25 available through re-sale
MORE about this artworkCo-published by Mullowney Printing and Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco.
Edition 25 + 8 proofs
Dimensions: 48 x 63 inches unframed
Medium: Direct gravure etching on nine copper plates printed on nine sheets of handmade gampi paper, joined and backed with sekishu kozo paper
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Sandow Birk
AK-47 Palmette #1, 2009
Ink and goache on paper
30 x 22 inches unframed
32 ¾ x 25 inches framed -
Sandow Birk
AK-47 Palmette #2, 2009
Ink and goache on paper
30 x 22 inches unframed
32 ¾ x 25 inches framed
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SOLD
Sandow Birk
American Qur'an/Sura 56, 2011
Gouache, acrylic, and ink on paper
Each panel 16 x 24 inches unframed
19 x 27 inches framed -
SOLD
Sandow Birk
American Qur'an/Sura 74, 2010
Gouache, acrylic and ink on paper
16 x 24 inches unframed
19 x 27 inches framed