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Maurizio Cattelan: ‘America’ says a lot with few words

Maurizio Cattelan "America" by Kris McKay

Photo: Maurizio Cattelan “America”, 2016 Gold, 72.4 x 35.6 x 68.6 cm Courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery © Maurizio Cattelan Installation view: Maurizio Cattelan: “America”, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, September 16, 2016–ongoing Photo: Kris McKay © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation

Maurizio Cattelan is an Italian artist known for satirical sculptures.
The Italian artist’s installation at the Guggenheim teases our infatuation with the 1%, implies our common humanity, and questions what is art.


Maurizio Cattelan: “America”

“America” (2016) is an installation of a working toilet cast in 18K gold in one of the public restrooms at the Guggenheim. Yes, you can use it.

The work makes fun of the excesses of the 1 percent while stating that in a way, we all shit the same.

“America” is a clear reference to Marcel Duchamp’s “Fountain” (1917). That Dadaist work was a porcelain urinal signed “R. Mutt.” “Fountain” made a statement about what is art. Cattelan makes the same reference.

“America” opened on September 16, 2016. The installation closes September 15, 2017.


Postscript

As an American, I am not at all offended by Cattelan’s depiction of our culture. He pretty much nailed it and somehow, Cattelan forecast our gilded presidency. Maybe America should be installed in in that hated tower on Fifth Avenue. It would be a perfect fit.


Guggenheim Offers America to White House

January 24, 2018 ~ The Washington Post reported that when the White House asked to borrow Vincent Van Gogh’s painting Landscape with Snow (1888) in September 2017, the Guggenheim declined, but offered Cattelan’s America instead.

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