Madison Square Park Conservancy's Mad. Sq. Art presents a new sculptural installation for late winter 2014: This Land Is Your Land by Brooklyn-based Chilean artist Iva?n Navarro. The site-specific installation presents three water towers inside of which neon reflections repeat infinitely. The sculptures merge a staple of the New York skyline with the street-level landscape of the Park. The artist takes the exhibition's title from the beloved 1940 Woody Guthrie folk song, which is both an American anthem and a vocal pull to the freedoms offered in this country for an immigrant population. The towers are elevated to a height above visitors' heads, allowing them to walk underneath and look up into each sculpture to view the content within. Originally scheduled to close April 13 following its February 20 premiere earlier this year, the popular work will now remain on view daily through April 20 in Madison Square Park.
Navarro's water towers-each measuring approximately seven feet in diameter and standing on roughly eight-foot-tall supports-function as vessels for a vocabulary of the political and personal experience of immigration. The interior of one tower features the words "me" and "we", another features the word "bed", and a third displays the image of a ladder-all of which are composed of neon light. An internal arrangement of mirrors enables each word or image to repeat perpetually through a seemingly endless vertical space.
Martin Friedman Senior Curator of the Madison Square Park Conservancy, Brooke Kamin Rapaport comments: "Iva?n Navarro uses memory-as a child during the brutal Pinochet regime in Chile-and reflection-on the freedoms of the American experience-to create This Land Is Your Land. This project is significant for our program because Navarro's work tackles issues pertaining to democracy, social structure and how language can simultaneously manifest liberation and oppression. While wood water tanks are a ubiquitous sight on New York City's rooftops, the artist loads them with substantive content demonstrating how sculpture can function as object and as a messenger of critical issues today."Videos