Mary Ann Unger
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May 10, 1945
Mary Ann Unger | |
|---|---|
Unger and her daughter in front of Sheaves, Dark Icons, Klarfeld Perry Gallery, 1992 | |
| Born | Mary Ann Unger May 10, 1945 New Jersey, United States |
| Died | December 28, 1998 (aged 53) |
| Education | Mount Holyoke College, Columbia University |
| Occupation | Sculptor |
| Known for | Large scale works |
| Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship, Pollock-Krasner Foundation grants recipient, Yaddo resident fellow |
| Website | maryannunger.com |
Mary Ann Unger (May 10, 1945 – December 28, 1998) was an American sculptor known for large scale, semi-abstract public works in which she evoked the body, bandaging, flesh, and bone. She is known for dark, bulbous, beam-like forms.[1] Her sculptures concern universal issues such as death and regeneration and are described as transcending time and place.[2] Unger received a Guggenheim Fellowship and Pollock-Krasner Foundation grants and was a resident fellow at Yaddo.[3] Her work is found in collections such as the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the High Museum of Art.[4] In 2018, Unger's work was acquired by both the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Art Institute of Chicago.
Mary Ann Unger was a sculptor known for her large scale works with subtle expression, in which she evoked the body, bandaging, flesh, and bone. Born in 1945, she was raised in New Jersey.[1] She learned to weld, cast, and carve as an undergraduate student at Mt. Holyoke College, where she later earned a bachelor's degree in 1967.[1] After a year of graduate study at the University of California at Berkeley, she spent several years traveling, including a trip alone through North Africa.[1] She later earned an M.F.A at Columbia University in 1975, where she studied with Ronald Bladen and George Sugarman.[1] She had solo exhibitions at the New York City Sculpture Center, the New Jersey State Museum, the Klarfeld Perry Gallery, and the Trans Hudson Gallery.[1] She received a Guggenheim Fellowship and Pollock-Krasner Foundation grants and was a resident fellow at Yaddo.[3] She became known for dark, bulbous, beamlike forms that were laid out or propped up in clusters. These pieces were made of hydrocal, a lightweight plaster, over steel armatures, with surfaces that appeared scarred and scorched.[1] Her sculptures spoke of universal issues such as death and regeneration, and transcended time and place.[2] Unger died in 1998 aged 53 from breast cancer.[1]
Public art
Unger produced a site-specific installation called Tweed Garden at Tweed Courthouse in New York in 1985. It was an environmental work clustered like a forest with passageways.[5] The 10 painted hexagonal columns are each 9 feet tall and flared like trees or flowers.[5] The columns are open in the middle and rise in layers, reaching toward the light from the glass dome above.[5] It has been described as heavy with meaning yet light and ornamental in architecture.[5]
That same year, Unger produced a site-specific installation for the Phillip and Muriel Berman Museum of Art at Ursinus College of Pennsylvania. Unger's Temple was a gazebo-like structure of red aluminum placed in a group of cherry trees.[6] It was constructed in an openwork fashion with aluminum plate ribs.[6] From afar, the monument looked like a giant party decoration.[6] Its circus-like color scheme echoed nineteenth century park architecture, but it was still integrated into the park well.[6]
In 1988, Unger's Family was installed at Bellevue Hospital Park in New York City. Critics called it a point of departure for an artist whose private and public works had previously remained separate.[7] The sculpture consists of three life-size abstract forms aligned as if processing.[7] Each element is both architectural and symbolic. One has been described as looking like a dragon tail or a carrot with large conical breasts, while another is more like a cross between an arch, a stepladder, and a stretching gymnast.[7] The third takes a two-part form, with the top like a tuning fork and the bottom like a lush, curvy body in a dress.[7] Unger successfully used pigmented cement overlaid on steel to evoke something earthly and organic.[7]
Unger's airy and grand monument known as Ode to Tatlin was commissioned as a permanent work in 1991 by the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College in New York. The sculpture forms a gateway to the school in the shape of an ellipse sliced in half to leave an entrance in the middle.[8] It was inspired by Monument to the Third International, a grand building designed by the Russian artist Vladimir Tatlin that was never constructed.[8] It was meant to suggest staves of music and the supports of a rollercoaster with a swooping path that contrasts the drab and incoherent stretch of campus where it is situated.[8] Critics were not fond of the sherbet colors of the painted slats of the monument because they found the excessive amount of sweetness almost sickening; however, from farther away, they acknowledged the power and splendor it emanated in its commonplace surroundings.[8]