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Orange County Museum of Art

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Photo: La Baiser/The Kiss, 1999, video still. Courtesy Max Protetch Gallery, New York.

Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle
January 26–March 23, 2003


Orange County Museum of Art
850 San Clemente Drive
Newport Beach, California 92660
Information: (949) 759-1122
Press Office: (949) 759-1122 ext. 207

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The Orange County Museum of Art is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of recent video installations by Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle. Over the last decade Manglano-Ovalle has emerged as one of his generation’s most compelling, socially engaged, and celebrated artists as he has created a body of work that has challenged social arrangements, investigated global politics, and explored ethnic identity.

This exhibition brings together three of Manglano-Ovalle’s video installations: The Kiss/Le Baiser (1999), Climate (2000), and Alltagszeit (In Ordinary Time) (2001). These works feature the iconic modernist architecture of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe as the site for a variety of everyday activities and scenarios that function as powerful social and political metaphors. Each of these three visually lush works was filmed in one of Mies’s landmark buildings: the Farnsworth House in Plano, Illinois, for The Kiss; the 860-880 Lake Shore Drive Apartments in Chicago for Climate; and the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin for Alltagszeit. In these works Mies’s iconic architecture becomes both a provocative subject and a seductive site for exploring questions of cultural identity, social boundaries, and global politics. These works contrast Mies’s utopian architectural ideals with the reality of contemporary social and political concerns.

In addition to these three video installations, OCMA’s exhibition includes a new sculpture by Manglano-Ovalle that represents his largest and most ambitious work in the medium to date. This new work is a large-scale fiberglass and titanium sculpture of a cloud whose form is based on a cumulo-nimbus (or supercell) thundercloud modeled by the Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Illinois. Working with architect Douglas Garofalo, Manglano-Ovalle converted the numerical data scanned from an existing thirty-kilometer-wide thundercloud and then scaled it down to be digitally sculpted by computer-controlled milling machines used by the automobile industry to prototype new car forms. Here, as in a number of Manglano-Ovalle’s earlier works, such as the video installation Climate, ephemeral forces such as weather and clouds—which recognize neither borders nor ideologies—become metaphors for global politics. More than sixteen feet wide and suspended just a few inches off the gallery floor, Manglano-Ovalle’s harnessed and shimmering cloud looms in the gallery space, evoking a chilling mushroom cloud or a work of contemporary architecture as much as it does the meteorological event that determined its striking three-dimensional form.

Exhibition catalogue available by calling (714) 662-3366.

Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle was organized by Cranbrook Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and curated by Irene Hofmann, curator of contemporary art, Orange County Museum of Art. Following the Orange County Museum of Art’s presentation, the exhibition will travel to the Palm Beach Institute for Contemporary Art in Lake Worth, Florida. Special thanks to Knoll for providing Mies van der Rohe furniture for the exhibition.

The Orange County Museum of Art's presentation of this exhibition is made possible by Jean and Tim Weiss, Joan and Don Beall, Patricia and Max Ellis, the Tappan Foundation, U.S. Trust, Delta Airlines and Visionaries. Special thanks to Bauer and Wiley Architects, Newport Beach, and RW Lewis Builders, Newport Beach, for their in-kind support.

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