Sculpting History: A Formal Analysis of Michael Stevenson's *The Fountain of Prosperity* (2006)

Art historian Amy Knight Powell has suggested that a key characteristic of form is its temporal “promiscuity.” Reliably unfaithful to its original moment, form is open to de- and re-contextualisation: as it enters into different settings and new liaisons it is capable of taking on numerous alternati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anna Parlane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Index Journal 2024-08-01
Series:Index Journal
Online Access:https://index-journal.org/issues/liquid-time/sculpting-history
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Summary:Art historian Amy Knight Powell has suggested that a key characteristic of form is its temporal “promiscuity.” Reliably unfaithful to its original moment, form is open to de- and re-contextualisation: as it enters into different settings and new liaisons it is capable of taking on numerous alternative associations. This paper analyses Berlin-based New Zealand artist Michael Stevenson’s *The Fountain of Prosperity (Answers to Some Questions About Bananas)* (2006) in light of Knight Powell’s observation. Focusing on the sculpture’s installation in Stevenson’s 2011 survey exhibition at Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art, I uncover a Duchampian methodology underlying Stevenson’s research-based practice. In its use of found material, contemporary research-based art builds on conceptual art, institutional critique and appropriation art practices, and like them is situated within the genealogy of the readymade. However, as with the apparently anti-art gestures of the readymades and conceptual art, the aesthetic motivations and formal innovations of research-based art tend to be neglected. The historical material such artists present is frequently read as a didactic illustration of their archival sources, with the artwork itself reduced to little more than a prompt for a history lesson. By exploiting the promiscuous temporal elasticity of form, works like *The Fountain of Prosperity* in fact demonstrate the sculptural logic that underpins the use of found objects in contemporary art.
ISSN:2652-4740