There's nice art and there's bad art; then there's appalling art and that's the case with the recently unveiled Princess Diana bronze statue by Ian Rank-Broadley.
On display in the Sunken Garden at Kensington Palace, her former home in London, the statue is vaguely reminiscent of other monstrosities like the Ronaldo bust by Emanuel Santos on display at Madeira airport or the George Best statue by Tony Currie, outside Winsdor Park in Belfast.
Diana’s sculpture misses all the points as Rank-Broadley makes us forget essential facts about the iconic princess, like her elegance and beauty.
Frozen in a maternal, yet cold, gesture that shows her protecting two children (the third hides behind her, maybe too ashamed to come out and face viewers…) Diana looks like a formal and unstylish character. Would her kindness, strength and humanitarian spirit have come out more if she had been remembered as she walked across an active minefield in her flak jacket (after all, she also walked through a metaphorical minefield throughout her life with the royal family…)? We will never know, but the statue also makes you wonder if there are solutions to turn scary modern statues devoid of all the pathos, sensuality and beauty of classical statues, into something more useful for future generations. Maybe there is and we could took inspiration from Pierre Huyghe's works to do it.
The Paris-born, but New York-based artist Huyghe is internationally known for establishing dialogues between biological and technological worlds and for his immersive environments often in constant change.
In 2017 Huyghe created a sculpture entitled "Exomind" (Deep water), a development of another statue conceived for the 2012 Documenta 13 in Kassel, that was based on a reclining female nude by Max Weber.
"Exomind" consists in a sculpture of a crouching woman based on the work of Japanese sculptor Tobari Kogan (1882-1927; View this photo) with its head covered by a beehive with a live colony of very busy bees. One of these sculptures was installed in a permanent garden environment that the artist created at the Dazaifu Tenmangu shrine on the Japanese Island of Fukuoka. But the artist also replicated the sculpture for other exhibitions and events.
Til the end of June, for example, "Exomind" was also nestled within the garden of de Young museum in San Francisco, as part of the exhibition "Uncanny Valley: Being Human in the Age of AI".
The title of the exhibition went pretty well with the statue that has a rather eerie look: though, it has a human body representing a female figure, its head complete with buzzing bees, makes it look like an alien, so that at first you don't really understand who or what the mysterious creature is.
There are many metaphors behind the artwork: while the artist reminds us in this way that keeping the bees in our mind is a way to save our planet, the statue is actually part of an even more complex system.
The growing and uncultivated beehive on the head of the statue constantly transforms, turning into a living and breathing mask, while it pollinates the surroundings, mutating also the area around it in this way. The bees with their pollinating work point at complex neural networks on the biological brain linked with natural forms and processes and at studies about understanding such networks.
Last but not least, the bees produce wax and honey, almost to remind us about the vitality of ideas that can turn into physical products, objects, items, installations and so on.
Some may think it would be rather drastic and very surreal to cover all the modern statues we do not like with a beehive, but you can bet it would be more entertaining and remind us about the importance of bees in the cycle of life. In Diana's case it would be even more poignant to cover her with a beehive: she who died a Princess, would finally be remembered after her life as a strong and determined queen bee.
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.