•  Installation Shots From: Paper
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Paper
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Paper
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Paper
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Paper
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
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Current Exhibition

Matthew Day Jackson

EXHIBITED AT THE SAATCHI GALLERY

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Matthew Day Jackson
The Lower 48 - Wyoming

2006

48 C-prints

Each: 39 x 56 cm Overall: 312 x 336 cm
It would be misleading to say that sculptor Matthew Day Jackson simply photographed anthropomorphic land formations in the course of a four-month drive through the continental United States, as if they were just sitting there waiting for him. Perhaps a few of these noble heads were, but many others were camera shy and had to be coaxed out of hiding – only from certain camera angles would they agree to expose themselves. This initial reticence aside, the 48 different sentinels, each representing an historic region (Lincoln Head Park in Washington; Bandon Rocks in Oregon, Hells’ Half Acre in Wyoming, etc) pose with the same proud determination shown more or less a century ago by Edward Curtis’ Indian chiefs. But who are they? The answer, Jackson tells us, requires us to peer into a post-apocalyptic future, where each portrait depicts one of “Mother Nature’s Land Soldiers.” Through erosion, pollution and relentless environmental degradation they have resurfaced to reclaim the earth, guarding forests, surveying coastlines and even looking skyward for potential threats.

Text by William A Ewing

OTHER RESOURCES

artfacts.net
Additional information regarding Matthew Day Jackson

perryrubenstein.com
A selection of alternative images and information on Matthew Day Jackson

chinati.org
New York-based artist Matt Jackson was in residence at the Chinati Foundation in June of 2004. Jackson makes sculptures and drawings using found materials to construct forms that allude to familiar or iconoclastic subjects. In his exhibition at Chinati entitled By No Means Necessary,

newyorkmetro.com - Matthew Day Jackson - Sculptor
Inspired by Russian Constructivism, Jackson is a different kind of Young Pioneer: a sculptor who repurposes frontier symbols for political aims.

publicartfund.org - Material World, group exhibition including Matthew Day
Matthew Day Jackson – Staff of Lady Liberty
Matthew Day Jackson’s recent sculptures take as their starting point some of history’s most legendary artifacts, icons, and figures—the covered wagon, the Alamo, a flagpole, and a Viking boat, to name a few.

the-artists.org
Additional information and links for Matthew Day Jackson.