New York City Officials and the Madison Square Park Conservancy gathered on Wednesday, May 1, 2013, for the inauguration of Red, Yellow and Blue (2013) by artist Orly Genger. A commission of the Conservancy’s Mad. Sq. Art program, the large-scale work features the artist’s renowned usage of intricately hand-knotted nautical rope covered in paint, transforming the park’s lush lawns into colorfully lined chambers. The work will remain on view in Madison Square Park daily from May 2 through September 8, 2013 before traveling to Massachusetts’s deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in October 2013 as the first touring commission of Mad. Sq. Art.

Genger’s work artfully transcends the perceived limits of the materials she employs. This Mad. Sq. Art commission consists of 1.4 million feet of knotted rope—the total length equating to nearly 20 times the length of Manhattan—covered in more than 3,000 gallons of paint, and weighing more than 100,000 pounds. Red, Yellow and Blue employs repurposed rope collected from hundreds of miles up and down the Eastern seaboard, bringing elements of the coastline to the urban setting of Madison Square Park. Together, three separate undulating structures of layered rope shaped on-site by the artist redefines the Park’s landscape, creating interactive environments that invite visitors to explore both exposed and hidden spaces, encouraging them to navigate and experience Madison Square Park anew.

“Madison Square Park has become a favorite destination for New Yorkers and visitors alike, thanks in large part to the vision of the Mad. Sq. Art program,” said Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. “New York artist Orly Genger’s Red, Yellow and Blue encourages us to see the park in a new light and will make us think – exactly what contemporary art is supposed to do.”

With a title referencing Barnett Newman’s Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue? series from the late 1960’s, Genger’s exhibition calls on the minimalistic traditions of Richard Serra and Frank Stella, while allowing for Genger’s own distinct contemporary aesthetic to emerge outdoors. As she adopts the intimate, domestic, and traditionally “feminine” activity of knitting, Genger creates large-scale, monolithic, “masculine” constructions that actively challenge and engage those who experience her work.

Artist Orly Genger states, “For Madison Square Park I wanted to create a work that would impress in scale and still engage rather than intimidate. In the context of my other installations, the rope used for Big Boss (2010) at MASS MoCA comprises only 10% of the rope used for the project at Madison Square Park, allowing me to work at an unprecedented scale. The tradition of knitting carries the sharing of stories and the installation draws on that idea. The repurposed rope brings with it the stories of different locations and by knotting it, a space is created for the words and thoughts of viewers in New York City to complete the work, creating a silent dialogue that waves along.”

“Through its exciting public art program, the Madison Square Park Conservancy invites visitors to engage with this neighborhood in dynamic new ways,” said Cultural Affairs Commissioner Kate D. Levin. “Orly Genger’s vibrant installation is another wonderful example of our City’s commitment to hosting extraordinary artists and transforming public spaces into platforms for ‘once in a lifetime’ experiences.”

“Thanks to the City’s partnership with the Madison Square Park Conservancy, the Park has emerged as a flourishing urban oasis,” said Veronica M. White, Commissioner of New York City’s Department of Parks & Recreation. “Each year, the Park hosts innovative and eye-catching public art exhibits that engage the eyes and minds of our visitors. We are delighted to welcome Red, Yellow and Blue by Orly Genger, continuing the tradition of free, contemporary art here in Madison Square Park.”

Orly Genger (b. 1979) lives in New York City and works in Brooklyn. She received her B.A. from Brown University in 2001, and attended The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2002. She has served as a guest lecturer/visiting artist at MassArt, Museum of Arts and Design, Ohio State University, Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, Indianapolis Museum of Art, Cranbrook Academy of Art, and the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, among others.

Genger’s recent solo exhibitions include Big Open Empty (2011), Larissa Goldston Gallery (New York) and Whole (2008), Indianapolis Museum of Art (Indiana). Selected group exhibitions include Sentimental Education (2011), Gavlak Gallery (Palm Beach, FL); Material world: Sculpture to Environment (2010), Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (North Adams, MA); and Energy Effects: Art and Artifacts from the Landscape of Glorious Excess (2010), Museum of Contemporary Art (Denver, CO). Genger’s work has been featured in collections in several museums, including the Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Hood Museum of Art, and Indianapolis Museum of Art. She is also the recipient of the Rappaport Prize, founded by the Phyllis & Jerome Lyle Rappaport Foundation to support the Foundation's mission of promoting leadership in public policy, medical research, and art.

Since 2004, Mad. Sq. Art has commissioned and presented more than twenty premier installations in Madison Square Park by acclaimed artists ranging in practice and media. Mad. Sq. Art has exhibited works by artists including Bill Beirne, Jim Campbell, Richard Deacon, Mark di Suvero, Bill Fontana, Ernie Gehr, Sandra Gibson & Luis Recoder, Antony Gormley, Jene Highstein, Tadashi Kawamata, Mel Kendrick, Sol LeWitt, Olia Lialina & Dragan Espenschied, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Charles Long, Jacco Olivier, Roxy Paine, Jaume Plensa, Shannon Plumb, Ursula von Rydingsvard, Alison Saar, Jessica Stockholder, Leo Villareal, and William Wegman, among others.

Major support for Mad. Sq. Art is provided by Liane Ginsberg, Agnes Gund, Toby Devan Lewis, Dorothy Lichtenstein, Tiffany & Co., The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Sorgente Group, and Anonymous. Substantial support is provided by Martha and Bruce Atwater, Melva Bucksbaum and Raymond Learsy, The Henry Luce Foundation, Melissa S. Meyer, Ronald A. Pizzuti, The Rudin Family, Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch, Tishman Speyer, the Joseph S. and Diane H. Steinberg Charitable Trust, and The Sol LeWitt Fund for Artist Work. Additional support is provided by Tom Berger, Danny and Audrey Meyer, Jamie Welch and Fiona Angelini, Leslie and Howard Zemsky, and NYC and Company.

Substantial exhibition support for Orly Genger’s Red, Yellow and Blue is provided by The Coby Foundation, Ltd. and deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum. Additional exhibition support is provided by Sidney Garber Fine Jewelry, Larissa Goldston and Joshua Wesoky, Chad Longmore and Matthew Oberstein, Carrie Shapiro and Peter Frey, Mary Spencer, and Ronnie and Al Trenk. Delta Air Lines is the Official Airline Sponsor of Mad. Sq. Art. Ace Hotel New York is the Official Hotel Partner of the Madison Square Park Conservancy. Mad. Sq. Art is supported in part with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council. The Madison Square Park Conservancy is a public/private partnership with New York City Parks & Recreation.

Madison Square Park Conservancy
Eleven Madison Ave, 28th Floor
New York (NY) 10010 United States
Tel. +1 (212) 5381884
info@madisonsquarepark.org
www.madisonsquarepark.org

Opening hours
Daily from 6am until 11pm