Omer Arbel: Particles for the Built World
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Surrey Art Gallery 13750 88 Ave, Surrey, British Columbia V3W 3L1
Omer Arbel, "75.9," nd
fabric cast concrete, rebar. Photo by Julian Kenchenten
Artist in Conversation and Opening Reception: Saturday, April 13 | 6:30 p.m. − 9 p.m.
Surrey Art Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibit of internationally renowned designer/sculptor/artist Omer Arbel. Omer Arbel: Particles for the Built Worldopens Saturday, April 13 with an artist talk at 6:30 p.m. and the reception to follow at 7:30 p.m. Admission is free.
Experimentation drives Omer Arbel’s art and design practice. He manipulates basic materials by applying heat, force, pressure, electricity, or movement to achieve surprising results.
Particles for the Built World focuses on Arbel’s experiments with concrete over the past five years. What if we poured concrete into fabric forms rather than plywood boxes or tube columns used in most building construction? The astonishing results are on display in this exhibit.
“My intention is to develop a way of working with concrete that acknowledges its liquid nature and yields expressive form,” he says. “These new methods could have significant practical and sculptural ramifications to the construction industry.”
The exhibit begins with the material research phase of Arbel’s process, showing a large fabric-cast concrete object spliced into nine 14 inch wide sections. The cuts are a way of allowing the viewer’s imagination (and his own) to understand the amorphous shapes resulting from the technique of fabric forming, as if with x-ray vision.
From there, visitors can see how the fabric forming technique applies to a South Surrey home currently under construction. Designed by Arbel and named 75.9, the house features fabric-formed concrete pillars in the shape of inverted trumpets, ranging from 14 to 30 feet tall. The columns are slender at their base and open up into large rectangular tops that become the roof of the house. Root balls of transplanted mature trees fill in the large voids of the trumpet shapes.
In addition to the sculptural installation, visitors will see a multi-channel projected film, architectural models, plans, photographs, and sectional collages. These objects, images, and sculptures reimagine domestic and urban life outside the flat rectilinear visual language of so much modern design.
On Tuesday, March 5 from 5 to 8 p.m., join Omer Arbel at a warehouse in Vancouver (1490 E Georgia St) to see the live concrete cutting of the fabric-formed sculpture that will be split into pieces for display at Surrey Art Gallery. On Saturday, May 4 from 1 to 4:30 p.m., Surrey Art Gallery is doing a special bus tour to the South Surrey house designed by Omer Arbel—check the Events section of the Gallery website to register as it gets closer. On Thursday, May 16 from 7 to 8:30 p.m., Arbel will be giving a free exhibition tour of his work in the Gallery.
About the Artist
Based between Vancouver and Berlin, Omer Arbel cultivates a fluid position between the fields of building, sculpture, invention, and design. Focal themes of his work include investigation of intrinsic mechanical, physical, and chemical qualities of materials and exploration of light as a medium. Arbel’s work has been exhibited at the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Barbican Centre, Vancouver Art Gallery, Mallett Antiques, and Monte Clark Gallery, among others.