Los Angeles, CA
Rita McBride: Particulates
a rotated, hyperbolic parabola structure that is both optical and ephemeral
For its inaugural installation in its newest gallery, which was formerly occupied by a bank and still boasts a vault with a steel door, the Hammer Museum is presenting Rita McBride’s Particulates, first conceived in 2016 and realized here in its third iteration. Composed of high-intensity laser beams, water molecules, and the dust particles in the air, the work prompts reconsideration of fundamental elements of sculpture such as mass, scale, verticality, and surface. Stretching across the former commercial space at the corner of the office tower that houses the museum, Particulates is a rotated, hyperbolic parabola structure that is both optical and ephemeral. Reconstituted for the Hammer’s gallery, the installation includes several elements created for or responding to the space. The large black wall that receives the lasers references the black architectural elements of the 1960s-era bank vault. Tinting on the windows both mimics the corporate aesthetic of the office towers and condominium buildings that line the Wilshire corridor and allows the lasers to be visible at all hours, from inside and out. Fabricated carbon fiber guidance barriers form a sculptural guardrail that invites viewers to pause as they meander past the sculpture and take in its form as it materializes in real time.
Audience Role
The form of particulates is a multi-helix, hyperboloid structure that is ephemeral and made visible when ambient dust and water molecules encounter the laser beam.
Ages: All ages
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About Hammer Museum
The Hammer Museum at UCLA believes in the promise of art and ideas to illuminate our lives and build a more just world.