The Posture of Place

Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis | 2004

A site-specific installation that focused on the museum building as a kind of body that settles into a physical location and social identity. The project began with a question: How can the physicality of the gallery space mirror an understanding of architecture as an extension of the human body and mind? Biomorphic disruptions inside the museum walls and along the cracks in the concrete floor endow the building with human characteristics. In one corner, tendon-like sinews imply flexibility. Expansion, contraction, stress and gravity are forces that activate the space and engage viewers.

The Posture of Place was part of the first Great Rivers Biennial, a grant and exhibition program for artists sponsored by the Gateway Foundation and Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, and selected in 2004 by Lisa Corrin, Hamza Walker and Debra Singer.