SELECTED WORKS BY Thomas Houseago
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Thomas Houseago
Joanne (6 views)
2005
plaster, hemp, steel, graphite
124.5 x 58.4 x 86.4 cm |
 




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Thomas Housago’s work playfully subverts the expectation of sculpture. Drawing reference to a multitude of styles such as Classicism, Cubism, and Futurism, Houseago’s intentionally clumsy forms trade the imperious and enduring qualities of traditional bronze or marble for the humble aesthetic of plaster and various found materials. Lacking the weighty physical stature associated with three dimensional media, Houseago’s ‘monumental’ structures appear almost comically flimsy, reducing the grandiose weight of art history into sympathetic effigies. |
Thomas Houseago
Folded Man (and 4 detail shots)
1997
plaster, jute, inox
220 x 110 x 80 cm |
 


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Houseago’s subjects lean to the figurative and mythological; bordering on abstraction, their rough hewn and incomplete forms both disclose their process of making and a sense of relational humility. Folded Man, a clunky semblance of a figure made from plaster-soaked jute wrapped over a skeletal support stands as an abject tribute to Boccioni; while Joanne, an emaciated rabbit, grimaces under floppy ears. Constructed from plaster-coated iron with a delicate sketch of a figure on its side, the animal’s painfully flat body is exaggerated as both object and surface, an insubstantial vessel for spiritual manifestation. Similarly, Caryatide With Squatting Man plays upon the devices of representation to create diverse meaning: placed on a makeshift plinth to elevate its importance, Houseago’s elaborate column serves to support a hollow sheath of a figure posed in an act of desecration. |
Thomas Houseago
Caryatide with Squatting Man (and details)
2000
wood, plaster, iron, jute
300 x 90 x 40 cm |
 


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Throughout Houseago’s work lies an engagement with hierarchical considerations of visual form and their associated values. Challenging these preconceptions through making and content, Houseago creates his own alternative ‘histories’, reflective of a more intimate and empathetic narrative. |
Thomas Houseago
Figure 2
2008
Wood, graphite, oil stick, tuf-cal, hemp, iron rebar
228.6 x 83.8 x 134.6 cm |
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Thomas Houseago
Figure 1 (and 2 details)
2008
Wood, graphite, tuf-cal, hemp, iron, oil stick
221 x 221 x 132.1 cm |
 

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ARTIST INFORMATION
Thomas Houseago's BIOGRAPHY
1972
Born in Leeds
Lives and works in Los Angeles
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2007
David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles
2004
Solo presentation, Art Brussels, with gallery Xavier Hufkens, Brussels, Belgium
2003
Thomas Houseago, I Am Here, Selected Sculptures 1995-2003, S.M.A.K., Gent, Belgium
2002
Xavier Hufkens, (w/Amy Bessone), Brussels, Belgium
2000
Something to Be, Galerie Fons Welters, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
1996
Stedelijk Museum Bureau, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Mum's tattoo, Si en La, (w/Matthew Monahan, guest curator: Luc Tuymans), Antwerp, Belgium
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2006
Red Eye: Los Angeles Artists from the Rubell Family Collection, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL.
Making and Finding, The Foundation To-Life, Mount Kisco, NY.
Transformers, Donna Beam Fine Art Gallery, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV.
The Glass Bead Game, Vilma Gold Project Space, Berlin, Germany
2005
Both Ends Burning, David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, CA.
Six Outdoor Projects, L.I.U., Brooklyn, New York, NY.
2003
Passie in Beeld, ruimtelijk werk uit de collectie van de Nederlandsche Bank, Maliebeeld, Den Haag, The Netherlands
Group show/artists of the gallery, Galerie Fons Welters, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2002
Stedelijk Museum in De Nieuwe Kerk, Beelden/Sculpture 1947-2002,curated by Rudi Fuchs, Nieuwe Kerk, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2001
Rondom Jheronimous Bosch, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
1999
Glad IJs, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Werk boven de bank, Archipel, Apeldoorn, The Netherlands
1998
Morning Glory, De Ateliers, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Summer Show, Xavier Hufkens, Brussels, Belgium
Acquisitions 1997, De Nederlandsche Bank, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
1997
New Acquisitions, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Other artists in SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME: EUROPEAN SCULPTURE
David Batchelor | Karla Black | Berlinde de Bruyckere | Peter Buggenhout | Steven Claydon | Bjorn Dahlem | Thomas Houseago | Jacob Dahl Jürgensen | Folkert De Jong | Ian Kiaer | Friedrich Kunath | Anselm Reyle | Silke Schatz | Dirk Skreber
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