Khufu, Khafre and Menkaure
N/A
- Status
2021 - Category
David Adjaye Sculptures - Gallery
Pace Gallery, Hong Kong - Stone Fabricator
Quarra Stone Company
Technical Info +
What looks like platonic, absolute forms that are just about visual pleasure and relate back to architecture, can in fact break up. There are three operations: a pyramid as a pure form, the void of the pyramid and then a segregated landscape of objects. I call them Monoform because they’re not design, they’re not art. I love the ambiguity and would like to keep it that way for as long as possible.
Entitled Khufu, Khafre and Menkaure in reference to the Pyramids of Giza, David Adjaye’s modular geometric sculptures pay homage to the ancient Egyptian pyramidal form that encodes an entire cultural history of technological innovation and ancient African knowledge systems. Both extending and departing from Adjaye’s broader architectural practice, the sculptures serve as a point of examination between relationships of formal and cultural meaning, between the canons of Classicism and the vernacular traditions of non-Western cultures.
A continuation of his experimentation with monoforms, the sculptures are composed of individual elements with the capacity to be reconfigured in a variety of orientations. Comprised of marble formed through the long history of geologic compression, in which minerals recrystallize to form streaks and veins, the sculptures appear static and immovable in their heavy solidity belying the fact that each of the four constituent parts can be reconfigured to produce multiple variations, giving them a sense of dynamism and play that is itself semantic in nature.
The sculptures were originally presented in visual and spatial dialogue with a new body of paintings by American artist Adam entitled ‘We are Not’ at Pace Hong Kong Gallery. Viewed in concert, the works articulate a shared visual lexicon that explores questions of language, identity, and monumentality.