Work from the Collection

Killed in Action (CSH #21, Richard NEUTRA)

Date: 2009
Medium: Sculpture
Materials: Black sheet metal, Chicken wire, Steel
Dimensions: 124 x 107.2 x 28 cm
Collection: Lafayette anticipations - Fonds de dotation Famille Moulin

Hanging vertically on the wall, the sculpture Killed in Action (CSH #21, Richard NEUTRA) appears as a bas-relief and a repertoire of structural forms. Wilfrid Almendra enhances the art of assemblage using heterogeneous materials and a surprising production process. The sculpture is made of an industrial black steel plate and an old railway fence, and is part of the Killed in Action (Case Study Houses) series created by the artist in 2009. Almendra was interested in an architectural programme launched by the magazine Art & Architecture in 1945 in the United States to design a group of thirty-seven individual houses that would be functional, economical, and replicable. The artist chose to work on those projects that were abandoned, hence the title of the series. Sculpture no. 21 resurrects the mysterious project of architect Richard Neutra. Almendra freely transposes the original plans and materials intended to build the model of the project. He deconstructs the habitat, breaks apart the solid forms, reorganizes details and materials, and introduces personal concepts to deliver a postmodern vision. He questions modernist ideals and the utopia of the suburban model of urban planning to “use rawness to create the sensitive and the poetic.”

Text written by Oriane Poret as part of the partnership between the École du Louvre and Lafayette Anticipations – Fonds de dotation Famille Moulin.


Exhibitions

L’intranquillité
CAC Passerelle, Brest (France)
from 05 Oct 2013 to 04 Jan 2014
Antidote 6
La Galerie des Galeries, Paris (France)
from 14 Oct 2010 to 08 Jan 2011
Killed in Action (Case Study Houses)
Galerie Bugada & Cargnel, Paris (France)
from 11 Dec 2009 to 13 Mar 2010