Alexis Rockman’s Manifest Destiny To Become Part of American Art’s Collection

Media - 2011.36A-D - SAAM-2011.36A-D_1 - 77692

Alexis Rockman, Manifest Destiny, 2004

May 3, 2011

Alexis Rockman's monumental painting, Manifest Destiny, has just been approved for acquisition. The painting is made up of four contiguous panels that extend twenty-four feet in length, and depicts the Brooklyn waterfront several hundred years in the future. The work feels like the perfect summation of Rockman's intense probing of the natural world, and the unnatural things that man has done to that world since the age of industry. According to Joanna Marsh, The James Dicke Curator for Contemporary Art, "In addition to being a technical tour-de-force, [Manifest Destiny] represents four years of intensive research and collaboration with engineers, architects and climatologists. It is a painting steeped in art historical reference, but profoundly forward-looking. The Smithsonian American Art Museum offers an ideal context for such a multivalent work, and the Smithsonian-wide emphasis on natural science and biodiversity affords a still richer framework for understanding it."

You have less than a week to catch the exhibition, Alexis Rockman: A Fable for Tomorrow, which closes on Sunday, May 8. In addition to Manifest Destiny, you can see 46 other paintings that have created a transformative experience in the museum.

 

Categories

Recent Posts

Person leaning toward a vase in a plexiglass covered case in a museum gallery, other artworks fill the space in the distance.
The artist builds futuristic worlds and characters he pairs with his traditionally sourced and formed pots, where knowledge of the past provides guidance for future generations.
SAAM
Three paintings on a light blue background.
A new exhibition that restores three American women of Japanese descent to their rightful place in the story of modernism 
SAAM
Sculpture of a person completely covered with multiple colorful, intricate patterns standing against a dark red wall with the exhibition title "The Shape of Power: Stories of Race and American Sculpture."
A new exhibition explores how the history of race in the United States is entwined in the history of American sculpture.
SAAM