Ugo Rondinone - Expression of Solitude
With a global pandemic fresh in our minds, we’ve all had some experience with solitude in the past few years, but I don't think you’d express solitude in quite the same way as swiss artist Ugo Rondinone. His installation ‘Expression of Solitude’ which first appeared in The Netherlands in 2016, but made a recent appearance in Auckland, New Zealand during 2022. The installation consists of 45 foam statues of melancholy clowns doing various daily activities spread throughout the room. In Auckland, the clowns were accompanied by a rainbow film attached to a nearby window, bathing the entire installation in a colorful light. The clown statues were made out of milled foam and epoxy, with appropriate clown clothes to wear. The piece of public art juxtaposes the colorful and happy image of clowns with the dour expressions, poses and loneliness of each statue. It's likely that this contrast is supposed to represent the monotony that depression and isolation bring upon daily tasks, turning something that you used to enjoy into a chore that you have to do to get through the day. Along with this, Rondinone has stated that the clown imagery represents society's outcasts, potentially touching on how lonely it can be when society treats you as a reject.
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