On View at the Jones Center and the Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park at Laguna Gloria
While it can be argued that the persona of an artist should be separate from an interpretation of the work, Tom Sachs (American, born 1966 in New York City, New York) poses an exception. The look of Sachs is unmistakably his own: an art world provocateur with a youthful visage, dressed in what could be called “smart boyish” attire—oxfords buttoned to the collar, pants rolled, stylish sneakers—with his signature mop of curly hair, facial scruff, and round glasses. With wit, charm, and a mischievous grin, Sachs scans his surroundings for potential fodder for his work, pulling a myriad of everyday references into his creative orbit. Playful intent, combined with a desire to upend comfort, social mores, and elitist systems, constitute the artist’s bread and butter. Sachs also articulates particular phrases and mantras that accompany his artistic persona like sound bites to a manifesto. Prior to stepping foot in his studio—a highly functioning “teaching hospital”1 of sorts with a cadre of assistants who tackle projects with almost obsessive rigor and intensity—the artist insists that all visitors watch Ten Bullets, 2010, an over-the-top, entertaining, and deadpan short film by Sachs and director-producer Van Neistat. In pseudo-documentary style, the narrative outlines the commando rules of his domain: statements such as “work to code,” “creativity is the enemy,” and “always be knolling” ring as philosophical clues to Sachs’s aesthetic and conceptual premise, while others, such as “be on time,” “keep a list,” and “persistence,” outline basic functional tactics for any successful operation.2 At the core of this universe, the artist acts as auteur of an art-as-life practice in which fashion and consumerism meet the aesthetics of militarization.
DIY, lo-fi, punk: these are all words frequently used to describe Sachs’s work. Using materials such as plywood, foam core, batteries, duct tape, rudimentary wires, hot glue, and solder, the artist and his assistants fabricate inventive gadgets, hardware, objects, and architectural constructions translated into a unique homemade aesthetic. Though difficult to box into a single category, Sachs’s practice can perhaps best be contextualized by the term bricolage, or the use of everyday objects and things found in one’s direct surroundings as a means of constructing work (and therefore articulating knowledge). Hovering somewhere between art and science, functional and mythological, Sachs as bricoleur brings to mind the use of the term by the French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, who wrote that "mythical thought is … a kind of intellectual ‘bricolage’."3 Alongside figures such as Sarah Sze, Manfred Pernice, and Isa Genzken, Sachs operates among a select group of contemporary artists who have successfully synthetized a conceptual and assemblage aesthetic with intelligent formal critique.
Early work by Sachs from the mid-1990s combined iconic fashion brands and elements of military equipment (aka violence) into fetishized, controversial objects, as in Tiffany Glock (Model 19), 1995, a gun constructed of baby blue packaging from the jewelry company Tiffany & Co., and Chanel Guillotine (Breakfast Nook), 1998, a sculpture that conflated society’s ultimate luxury brand with a medieval form of execution—killing in style, so to speak. Pop culture brands also make appearances, as in his appropriation of the Japanese pre-adolescent-girl character Hello Kitty, first rendered by Sachs in a modestly scaled 1994 nativity scene for Barneys department store, then large-scale, in foam core, and, finally, in bronze. Or his riff on McDonald’s, hybridizing self-constructed elements of the fast food chain with guns, car racing, and drugs, as in Nutsy’s, 2002 and 2003. More recently, the artist seems to specialize less in individualized objects than in elaborate, self-contained worlds. Sachs’s best-known iteration within this realm is his creative appropriation of space exploration, an ongoing project that took its most expansive form in Space Program: Mars, 2012, a massive installation at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City. Occupying some fifty-five thousand square feet, replete with objects, architectural elements, and live performers, the exhibition contained Sachs’s versions of all aspects and components of a space mission to Mars, including equipment for exploratory and rescue flights, space suits, launch control, food delivery, and even human-waste disposal. Following on the heels of the closing of NASA’s storied Space Shuttle Program in 2011, perhaps the exploration of the unknown, couched in the story line of one of mankind’s greatest modernist achievements in science, becomes the quintessential artistic boyhood metaphor.
For The Contemporary Austin, the artist presents Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective 1999–2015, an immersive, interactive assemblage of sculptures, objects, and audio elements riffing on the “boombox”—the 1980s pre-iPod, hip-hop street badge of honor, and a nod to Sachs’s love of the genre. At the Jones Center, a series of working ceramic boomboxes of varying sizes and scales, including a selection made at the museum’s Art School at Laguna Gloria, feature curated playlists from pop icons and friends of the artist (at the time of this writing, Kanye West has already submitted his list). Other objects—including a classic version of his Hello Kitty sculpture, two large-scale oratory speakers (which the artist has said reference those used by Hitler)4, a bronze battery tower, and an interactive bodega—activate the remainder of the gallery space. At the Betty and Edward Marcus Sculpture Park at Laguna Gloria, iconic Sachs imagery appears in the form of large-scale, outdoor bronze works, including a riff on Dick Bruna’s beloved cartoon character, Miffy Fountain, 2008, and a work that references modernists’ great towering monuments but renders it Duchamp-style, in the form of an interpretive stupa. The artist has also invited the ceramicist and sculptor JJ PEET to exhibit in tandem with him at the Gatehouse Gallery at Laguna Gloria. Although historically Sachs’s work has been deliberately made with everyday, cheap construction materials, more recently, as seen in much of the work in this exhibition, he has increasingly moved into bronze and ceramics, two very different (and traditional) media. Regarding the latter, as the artist points out, “Ceramics is just clay treated with heat to become stone, and thus the only material that exists today that will be around in five thousand years. Everything else—steel, wood, plastic—will all decompose and revert back to the raw elements.”5 Taken as a whole, the artist manifests an expansive and creative playground where anything can be art, no topic is off-limits, and Pop and modernist icons are toppled from their proverbial pedestals and transformed into fantastical constructions of a proto-Sachsian world.
This exhibition is organized by Sean Ripple, Assistant Curator. Text by Heather Pesanti, Senior Curator. Special assistance was provided by the Art School at Laguna Gloria and James Tisdale, Ceramics Coordinator.
Tom Sachs Exhibition Support: Shelley Fox Aarons and Philip Aarons, Hotel Saint Cecilia, Hotel San Jose, Jeffrey’s, Nancy and Dr. Robert Magoon, The Moody Foundation, The Nightingale Code Foundation, John and Amy Phelan, Vision Fund Leaders and Contributors
While in Austin, museum guests are welcome to dine at Jeffrey’s and Josephine House, official restaurants for Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective 1999–2015.
Hotel Saint Cecilia and Hotel San Jose are the official hotels for the exhibition.
Planning an extended visit to Texas? Consider a stay at sister properties Hotel Havana, on a quiet stretch of the River Walk in San Antonio, and El Cosmico, an eighteen-acre nomadic hotel and campground in Marfa, Texas.
Tom Sachs (American, born 1966 in New York City, New York) currently lives and works in New York City. He studied at the Architectural Association in London in 1987 and received his BA from Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont, in 1989.
Sachs’s recent solo exhibitions and projects include American Handmade Paintings at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris (2014); Space Program: Mars at the Park Avenue Armory, New York City (2012); Nautical Challenge and Other Voodoo at the Baldwin Gallery, Aspen (2012); and WORK at Sperone Westwater, New York City (2011). In 2010, Sachs participated in the Venice Architecture Biennale and has since participated in the 2013 Lyon Biennale. Sachs was the recipient of the Aspen Award for Art in 2012.
The artist’s work has been collected by numerous museums and is included in private and public collections worldwide, among them the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City; the Jewish Museum, New York City; the Citigroup Art Collection, New York City; the NASA Permanent Collection, Washington, D.C.; the Art Institute of Chicago; Centre Pompidou, Paris; the Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo; the Jumex Collection, Mexico City; and Fondazione Prada, Milan.
Members are invited to Join us to celebrate the opening of Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective 1999–2015 at The Contemporary Austin.
Artists on view Tom Sachs and JJ PEET join Senior Curator Heather Pesanti in conversation.
In Boomboxes + Bricolage, teachers will explore the new exhibition Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective 1999–2015, then experiment with a variety of materials to create a sculpture inspired by the artist’s use of bricolage.
Good Taste: Boombox Food, co-presented by Edible Austin, takes inspiration from artist Tom Sachs. Join us for an evening of inventively orchestrated food and music alongside Sachs’s functional sound systems and boombox sculptures, on view at the Jones Center.
Artist Tom Sachs will sign zines produced in conjunction with Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective 1999–2015, currently on view at The Contemporary Austin, as well as zines and other paraphernalia from the artist’s Space Program works.
In A Space Program, premiering at SXSW Film, Tom Sachs takes us on an intricately handmade journey to the Red Planet, providing audiences with a first-person look inside his studio and methods as his team searches for the answer to humankind’s ultimate question: Are we alone?
For three days, some of the most acclaimed and influential DJs and producers in electronic and hip-hop music activate the boombox-inspired sculptures in Tom Sachs’s immersive installation as instruments to create music. TODAY: 1P Young Guru, 2P Redinho, 3P Nadus, 4P Hank Shocklee
For three days, some of the most acclaimed and influential DJs and producers in electronic and hip-hop music activate the boombox-inspired sculptures in Tom Sachs’s immersive installation as instruments to create music. TODAY: 1P Suicideyear, 2P DJ Sliink, 3P Dream Koala, 4P J. Rocc
For three days, some of the most acclaimed and influential DJs and producers in electronic and hip-hop music activate the boombox-inspired sculptures in Tom Sachs’s immersive installation as instruments to create music. TODAY: 1P Just Blaze, 2P Knxwledge, 3P IAMNOBODI, 4P Peanut Butter Wolf