Legendary artist Frank Stella continues to prove his unparalleled curiosity and capacity for reinvention. His current exhibition – Frank Stella: Recent Sculpture – at Jeffrey Deitch in New York’s SoHo neighborhood presents five massive sculptures with color-shifting elements that feel as if they could lift into the air at any second. The exhibition is a visual rollercoaster of surprising form, color, gravity, and scale in a space that invites multi-level vantage points.
Upon entry, three sculptures from the Scarlatti Sonata Kirkpatrick stand 16-18 feet tall. All dated 2014, the pieces supported by a single metal pole on a wheeled base. Each work was first designed by Stella in a computer modeling program, allowing solid ribbons, orbs, and spirals to overlap into each other’s space as if there was some glitch in space time. The digital shapes are then 3D printed as small singular objects and sent to fabricators in the Netherlands and Belgium to be engineered at a massive scale using foam, fiberglass, or aluminum, before returning to Stella’s studio in New York to be sprayed with car paint.
In the teal and white K.40 Large Version (above), a central spherical orb shifts in color based on your angle of view – from orange-red to a contrasting blue-purple. In K.123 Large Version (below), wispy ribbons of white and yellow pierce through a curving mass that shifts between a wide spectrum of blue, fuchsia, and orange. The color, like the forms themselves, benefit from your own continued motion, and this space provides plenty of room to circle each.
On the elevated “stage level,” two works from the more recent Atlantic Salmon Rivers Series have a different relationship to gravity. Hanging from massive supports, they, too, feel weightless. The 2022 sculpture The Petite Cascapedia measures over 27-feet across and features large squiggles of red, yellow, and blue lines. It’s as if giant tubes of paint have been squeezed in zero gravity, weaving through a white and metallic central form that reflects an aura of the colors.
Jeffery Deitch Gallery in SoHo is a perfect setting for these. It’s an airplane hangar-like space that adds to a feeling of you may be walking through a top-secret storage facility of UFO’s or futuristic energy reactors.
But don’t exit yet. For those who are curious enough to venture up the stairs to the high balcony level, a surprise awaits – a scale model of the entire exhibition and everything in it! Measuring 6×12 feet, the metal “gallery” holds 3D-printed versions of every sculpture in the show painted in the same brilliant colors. It provides an Alice in Wonderland sense of scale as you can view both the large works and tiny works simultaneously while also giving you a view of the works you could only get in a helicopter.
Whether you have followed Stella’s exceptional career for over 6 decades, or it’s your very first introduction to his practice, you’ll be overwhelmed by wonder, joy, and a contagious spirit of discovery.
What: Frank Stella: Recent Sculpture
Where: Jeffrey Deitch, 18 Wooster Street, New York, New York
When: March 8 – April 20, 2024
All photos by Genevieve Hanson. ©2024 Frank Stella / Artists Rights Society (ARS)