Monica Bonvicini (b.1965, Venice, Italy) is interested in the power relations and hidden politics presented in much architectural design.
In her piece entitled BUILTFORCRIME (2006) for International 06, Bonvicini was concerned with glass – a building material synonymous with the utopian Modernist visions of architects such as Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe. The sculpture drew our attention to a material that we usually look straight through precisely by breaking it – and, at the same time, cracking the patriarchal underpinnings of Modernist architecture.
Spelling out the phrase ‘BUILTFORCRIME’, Bonvicini’s imposing sculpture of glass and light tested the functional remit of the material from which it was constructed – safety glass. The inner layer of each letter received impacts causing it to shatter while still retaining it’s form. The statement of the text and the mode, or act, of production/destruction was a contradiction of the intended use of the material – not, of course, to be smashed.
BUILTFORCRIME, 2006
Installation
Commissioned by Liverpool Biennial 2006
Exhibited at Tate Liverpool
Courtesy of the artist and Emi Fontana Gallery, Milan.
Liverpool Biennial
55 New Bird Street
Liverpool L1 0BW
Liverpool Biennial is funded by
Founding Supporter
James Moores