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Chicago’s Millennium Park will come alive this season with four large-scale sculptures by the acclaimed Mexican artist Yvonne Domenge gracing the Park’s Boeing Galleries through October 21, 2012. Framing the dramatic art and architecture of the Park, Interconnected: The Sculptures of Yvonne Domenge will enhance one of Chicago’s most popular public spaces—Millennium Park. Admission to the Park and the exhibition is free.
Interconnected: The Sculptures of Yvonne Domenge is presented by the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events and Millennium Park, in cooperation with Millennium Park, Inc., and is sponsored by The Boeing Company and Mexico’s CONACULTA (The National Council for the Arts and Culture), the Chicago Office of Tourism and Culture, with support from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, the National Museum of Mexican Art, and the Consulate General of Mexico.
Yvonne Domenge’s fascination with organic shapes, form and geometry will be evident in the four pieces of colorful artwork created specifically for Millennium Park. One of the pieces will be placed in the North Boeing Gallery while the other three will be installed in the South Boeing Gallery.
The largest piece, a bronze sculpture painted bright red entitled Tree of Life, measures approximately 16 feet tall and will sit in the North Boeing Gallery, along with two companion seeds measuring four feet wide by nine feet high. An age-old concept, the tree of life is a symbol of the connection between the underworld, the sky, and the terrestrial world in pre-Columbian cultures. The tree symbolizes life’s energy, and the seeds scattered beneath represent the beauty and fragility of new life.
The South Boeing Gallery will boast three steel spheres, Tabachin Ribbon, a 13 foot tall yellow sculpture; Wind Waves, a white sculpture measuring approximately 11 feet high and Coral, in blue, approximately 10 feet high. Domenge’s spheres defy gravity and space, conveying a rhythmic beauty and a sense of a larger universal order.
Yvonne Domenge was born in Mexico City in 1946. She studied plastic arts at the Outremont School in Montreal, Canada, at the Corcoran School of Art, Washington, D.C., and in Mexico City. Working in materials as diverse as wood, stone, clay, marble, cement, steel, porcelain, silver, and resin, Domenge has had more than 40 solo shows and participated in nearly 200 group exhibitions in cities across Mexico, the United States, Canada, Europe, and China, including the Musée du Louvre in Paris. Her sculpture Lily recently won a gold medal at the Olympic Landscape Sculpture Design Contest in Beijing, China, and her work was selected to represent Mexico for the International Sculpture Biennale in Vancouver, Canada.
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Dates:
Apr 6, 2011 - Oct 21, 2012
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Interconnected: The Sculptures of Yvonne Domenge
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Striving to represent underlying patterns in what may outwardly seem chaotic, Yvonne Domenge’s sculpture strikes a unity in what we perceive as opposites and finds harmony in apparent dissonances. Often referencing the natural world, Domenge’s work reveals a fascination with form and geometry. For more information, please visit http://www.explorechicago.org/city/en/things_see_do/event_landing/events/dca_tourism/Interconnected__The_Sculptures_of_Yvonne_Domenge.html
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Location:
Millennium Park, Boeing Galleries
N. Michigan Ave. & E. Randolph St.
Chicago, IL 60602
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Website:
For additional information please visit http://www.millenniumpark.org
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Accessibility:
The following services are available:
- Wheelchair loans in the Millennium Park Welcome Center, 201 E. Randolph St.
- Integrated spaces for wheelchair seating at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion
- Wheelchair accessible restroom facilities
- Assisted listening devices at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion Sound Booth
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Public
Transportation:
For travel information, visit www.transitchicago.org
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