• Project 18

MARTIN BOYCE 2008

I wanted to create a collapse of two places, to somehow shipwreck or abandon one landscape within another. Martin Boyce
  • Thomas Demand
  • Michael Landy
  • John Baldessari
  • Santiago Sierra
  • Bill Viola
  • Stephen Vitiello
  • Tatzu Nishi
  • Martin Boyce
  • Bill Viola
  • Gregor Schnieder
  • Urs Fischer
  • Barry McGee
  • Ugo Rondinone
  • Vanessa Beecroft
  • Sol LeWitt
  • Jeff Koons
  • Christo and Jeanne-Claude
  • An Australian Accent
  • Richard Long
  • Sol LeWitt
  • Charlotte Moorman and Nam June Paik
  • Miralda
  • Gilbert & George
  • Harald Szeemann
  • Christo and Jeanne-Claude
18
Martin Boyce creates unique new environments, sampling from the vocabulary of 20th-century architecture and design, the built spaces and constructed experiences of contemporary life. For Project 18, Boyce’s new work, We are shipwrecked and landlocked, created a dramatic installation for the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol. A dusty desert landscape was filled with a matrix of sculptures all developed from the same basic shapes – manipulated and reconfigured into different combinations. At once familiar and surreal, the forms recalled the modernist architecture of an urban park, colliding with the 19th-century architecture of their surrounds.
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VIDEOS


Documentary and selected interviews with Martin Boyce.

PHOTOS

PROJECT 18: detail of one of the smaller wire-mesh sculptures from Martin Boyce’s installation <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008. Photo: Adam Free.PROJECT 18: installation underway for Martin Boyce, <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008 in the courtyard of old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: Martin Boyce in front of <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008 in the courtyard of old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: entrance to the courtyard of old Melbourne Gaol, with a view of Martin Boyce's installation <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008. Photo: Adam Free
PROJECT 18: installation view of <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, transforming the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol with a desert landscape and sculptural installation. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: Martin Boyce and John Kaldor with the installation <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, in the Old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: detail of one of the 'tree' sculptures from Martin Boyce's installation <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, in the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: detail from Martin Boyce's, <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, in the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam Free
PROJECT 18: detail from Martin Boyce's, <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, in the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: Martin Boyce's <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol was transformed into a desert landscape and sculptural installation. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: aerial view of Martin Boyce's installation <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, installed in the courtyard of the old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam FreePROJECT 18: detail of the 'tree' sculptures from <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008, in the courtyard of the Old Melbourne Gaol. Photo: Adam Free

DOCUMENTS

PROJECT 18: Preliminary cardboard model of <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em> which was installed in the courtyard of the old Melbourne Gaol in 2008.PROJECT 18: Preliminary cardboard model of the 'tree' sculptural element of <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008PROJECT 18: Preliminary paper model of the 'Fence' sculptural element of <em>We are shipwrecked and landlocked</em>, 2008.