Engagement | |
---|---|
Year | 2005 |
Type | Sculpture |
Medium | Aluminum, steel, plexiglass |
Location | Vancouver, British Columbia |
49°16′56″N123°08′28″W / 49.28222°N 123.141157°W |
Engagement is a series of sculptures by Dennis Oppenheim depicting two diamond engagement rings. One version was installed in 2005 at Sunset Beach in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. [1] [2] Others are at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada, [3] San Diego, California, [4] Ruoholahti, Finland, [5] Sha Tin, Hong Kong [6] , and Leoben, Austria. [7]
Engagement, installed at Sunset Beach in 2005, depicts two diamond engagement rings and stands nearly 30 feet tall. The diamonds, illuminated and tilting away from one another, are composed of translucent plexiglass boxes, steel and aluminum. [1] The Vancouver Biennale described the sculpture as pop art. Engagement is one of several sculptures by Oppenheim that has been installed in Vancouver: The Device to Root Out Evil an upside-down aluminum church, was installed along the waterfront in Coal Harbour from 2005 to 2008, and Arriving Home was displayed within Vancouver International Airport as part of the 2009–2011 Vancouver Biennale. [8]
During November 11–17, 2007, Engagement was installed along the waterfront at Laurel and Harbor Drive in San Diego, California. [9]
Oppenheim, who often declines to explain his works, kept the meaning of Engagement ambiguous on purpose. [1] According to the San Diego Port, the work reminds spectators that "marriage requires a balance between two people with different interests, tastes and backgrounds" and represents the "dichotomy of marriage, expressing the romantic and the melancholy". [9]
Debates over same-sex marriage in Canada were taking place around the time the work was installed in Vancouver. [1] [8]
An engagement ring, also known as a betrothal ring, is a ring indicating that the person wearing it is engaged to be married, especially in Western cultures. A ring is presented as an engagement gift by a partner to their prospective spouse when they propose marriage or directly after a marriage proposal is accepted. It represents a formal agreement to future marriage. In most Western countries, engagement rings are worn mostly by women, and rings can feature diamonds or other gemstones. The neologism "mangagement ring" is sometimes used for an engagement ring worn by men. In some cultures, including Northern Europe, both partners wear matching rings, and engagement rings may also be used as wedding rings. In the Anglosphere, the ring is customarily worn on the left hand ring finger, but customs vary considerably elsewhere across the world.
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