The Metropolitan Museum of Art has announced that Hew Locke will be the next artist featured in its provocative Facade Commission series.
The Guyanese-British artist’s effort is titled “Gilt” and will follow recent interventions by Carol Bove and Wangechi Mutu for the third version of the commission, which was begun in 2019 as the museum looked for new ways to engage its collections, history, and neoclassical exterior with the public and its newfound mandate for institutional self-reflection.
Architect Richard Hunt Morris was never fully able to realize his vision for the museum’s facade by the time of its completion in 1902. As a result, four extended niches were left empty until the commission began and will now showcase a quartet of trophy-like sculptures from Locke that are “informed by [his] deep knowledge of the Met’s collection and […] reference the institution in ways both direct and indirect,” according to Director Max Hollein.
Locke is coming off of the recent opening of a similar installation at the Tate Britain that played on themes of colonialism, cultural appropriation, and migration.
“Hew Locke uses a delirious aesthetic of abundance and excess to reflect themes of deep urgency in the past and present, including wealth, imperial power, and prestige, astutely critiquing their visual iconography through reclamation,” The Met’s Modern and Contemporary Art chair Sheena Wagstaff added. “Locke’s work deftly interweaves the fine lines between theatricality, visual beauty, and critical insight.”
The commission will open on September 16th and run through the 22nd of May next year.
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