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John Chamberlain’s Recycled Car Parts Sculptures Now On View at the Guggenheim Museum

03/05/2012
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  • John Chamberlain
    The Upper East Side’s <a href="http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/exhibitions/on-view/john-chamberlain-choices" target="_blank">Guggenheim Museum</a> is honoring American Abstract Expressionist sculptor <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Chamberlain_(sculptor)" target="_blank">John Chamberlain</a> with a retrospective exhibition until May 13th. Chamberlain, who recently passed away, had the innate ability to transform disused cars into sculptures that appear to be <a href="http://inhabitat.com/edouard-martinets-delicate-metal-animal-sculptures-are-made-from-old-bike-parts/" target="_blank">feather-light</a>. The incredible exhibition highlights a comprehensive collection of the artist's work from the 1950s to his last works made in 2011.
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  • John Chamberlain
    Chamberlain’s <a href="http://inhabitat.com/cubed-maze3-is-a-larger-than-life-maze-made-from-recycled-materials/" target="_blank">sculptures are essentially recycled</a>, squished cars.
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  • John Chamberlain
    The vibrantly colored elements of heavy metal were <a href="http://inhabitat.com/carmina-campus-recycles-mini-roadster-parts-into-luxury-handbags/" target="_blank">removed from cars</a> made during a time before automobiles were made from streamlined plastic.
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  • John Chamberlain
    Instead, one can see the clunky and heavy fenders, thick doors and solidity of the metal used to make automobiles in a time before the weight of a vehicle was taken into consideration due to concerns of fuel efficiency. Describing his sculptures as creative re-use, many simply saw them as junk, when he began using cars as material in the mid 1950s.
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  • John Chamberlain
    But the world finally accepted Chamberlain’s vision, and he soon became one of the most renowned artists to use <a href="http://inhabitat.com/sarah-turner-recycled-bottle-family-lights-up-nottingham/" target="_blank">recycled materials</a> in the world.
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  • John Chamberlain
    For many years up until his death in December of last year, Chamberlain worked in a studio on Long Island, acquiring <a href="http://inhabitat.com/nyc/chelsea-steampunk-apartment-is-lit-by-repurposed-32-foot-long-zeppelin-led-lamp/" target="_blank">vintage car scraps</a>, and bending them into incredibly heavy sculpture which see to defy gravity.
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  • John Chamberlain
    Treating metal like fabric, he had the impressive ability to make metal gently fold like drapery. This treatment calls to mind the traditional study of sculptural drapery in marble sculpting, a practice spanning back to the ancient Greeks.
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  • John Chamberlain
    Chamberlain’s <a href="http://inhabitat.com/take-a-bath-of-knowledge-with-vanessa-mancinis-tub-made-of-books/" target="_blank">sculptures</a> are now in museums across the globe, and namely in the permanent collection at <a href="http://www.diacenter.org/" target="_blank">Dia Beacon</a>, a short train ride upstate.
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  • John Chamberlain
    But visitors will experience a real treat, with the large chronological collection of his work arranged around the spiraling floor plan of the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/nyc/former-bmw-guggenheim-lab-lot-in-the-east-village-is-now-a-community-park/" target="_blank">Guggenheim</a>.
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John Chamberlain

The Upper East Side’s Guggenheim Museum is honoring American Abstract Expressionist sculptor John Chamberlain with a retrospective exhibition until May 13th. Chamberlain, who recently passed away, had the innate ability to transform disused cars into sculptures that appear to be feather-light. The incredible exhibition highlights a comprehensive collection of the artist's work from the 1950s to his last works made in 2011.

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Categories:  Art, Design
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