Tom Shannon (born June 23, 1947) is an American artist and inventor. [1]
Tom Shannon | |
---|---|
Born | Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S. | June 23, 1947
Education |
|
Known for | Sculpture, painting, or drawing things that levitate or float |
Notable work |
|
Movement | Conceptualism, Minimalism, Installation Art |
Website | tomshannon |
Tom Shannon was born in Kenosha, Wisconsin on June 23, 1947 to parents John Kingsley Shannon and Audrey Elizabeth Shannon. His father was an inventor and served as a Marine pilot during WWII. Shannon has two brothers, John and James. In 1966, he attended the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee and received an MFA in 1971 from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. On September 26, 1990 Shannon married Catherine Matisse Monnier, a great granddaughter of Henri Matisse and granddaughter of Marcel Duchamp. Together, they have three children. Shannon currently resides in New York City. [2]
Utilizing his father's battery manufacturing plant, 19 year old Shannon created Squat, 1966. An interactive robotic sculpture responsive to the sense of touch. [3]
Squat won the Pauline Palmer Prize at the Art Institute of Chicago that year in a show juried by James Speyer and Walter Hopps. [4] In 1969, Squat would be included in the landmark exhibition, The Machine as Seen at the End of the Mechanical Age at New York's Museum of Modern Art. It is considered a seminal work in robotic art. [5]
Though science and technology highly influence Shannon's practice, his work profoundly reveals a deeper connection to hidden beauty within universal themes.
In the 1980s, exploring the forces of levitation became central to Shannon's work. By designing a system of permanent magnets Shannon's sculptures evoke a sense of weightlessness as seemingly heavy materials, such as metal and wood, effortlessly float above their base.
In 1981, Shannon created his first large scale levitation sculpture, Compass of Love. The seven-meter magnetic piece was acquired by The Musee d'Art Moderne de Paris after its inclusion in their 1983 exhibit titled, ALEA[S]. [6] In addition, Compass of Love was included in the 1986 Venice Biennale. [7]
With the participation of R. Buckminster Fuller and Shoji Sadao, Shannon patented and produced SynchronousWorld Clock, 1983 (edition of 20). [8] Currently, both the Buckminster Fuller Institute and the Smithsonian American History Museum have Shannon's World Clock in their collection. [9]
Through the French Ministry of Culture, art collector and museum director Pontus Hulten commissioned Shannon to create a major work for Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie (CSI) in Parc de la Villette, Paris. Shannon designed a 17-meter diameter spherical array of computer-controlled RGB LED nodes equidistantly spaced like atoms in a crystal titled, The Crystal Ball.
In 1991, Shannon exhibited Compass Moon Atom Room, a room entirely filled with magnetic spheres aligned by Earth's magnetic field, at Moderna Museet in Stockholm. [10]
In 2000, Shannon commissioned AeroVironment to perform a feasibility study for Air Genie Video Airship. Air Genie is a spherical helium airship whose entire surface is an LED video screen. By 2003 a US Patent was granted. [11] In the same year, Shannon was a featured artist at the 2003 TED Conference where he presented Air Genie. Later in 2009, Shannon would again be invited to TED to show a series of paintings made by a remote-controlled pendulum. [12] [13]
Shannon was commissioned by the Grand Palais in Paris to make a movie of his Airlands project (aka Outlands) for a major millennial show covering ten thousand years titled,Visions of the Future. [14]
Shannon's sculptures have been exhibited internationally at the Centre Pompidou, the Stedelijk Museum, Moderna Museet, the Venice Biennale, the Sao Paulo Biennial, the Biennale de Lyon, the Musee d'Art Moderne de Paris, Art Tower Mito and the Whitney Museum.
Shannon's sculptures are conceptually driven covering a range of existential conditions. These conditions include, natural forces, properties, characteristics, proportions, web of sensations, and the knowledge of which we are connected. For example, Shannon's sculpture, Ray, 1986, exhibits the Sun and Earth in proportion with the cone of energy, gravity, electromagnetic, and luminosity which collectively connect the two spheres.
Shannon's series of levitating sculptures utilize his method of incorporating permanent magnets within his pieces. For example, in works such as, New Romance, 1989, Shannon creates a wooden square frame accompanied by an elongated floating piece. [15] This method has additionally been implemented in his "Array" works where a series of suspended magnetic spheres fill an entire room of three-dimensional crystalline arrangements. Like a compass, each sphere orients to the Earth's magnetic field while additionally interacting with one another.
His recent work includes large outdoor sculptures such as, Drop, 2009, which behave as weightless objects. The sculpture's internal mechanisms consist of axles, ball-bearings, universal joints, ball & sockets, fulcrums and massive counterweights. The sculpture's interior grant the ability to interact with Shannon's work allowing the pieces to spin, tilt, rise/fall and glide horizontally while eventually returning to equilibrium.
Shannon also designed awards for the TED Prize, the Buckminster Fuller Challenge prize sculpture and the Trophee Jules Verne installed at the Musee de la Marine in Paris. [13] [16] [17]
In November 2019, the Science Museum Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, OK opened a year-long exhibition of new and older work by Shannon entitled, "Tom Shannon: Universe in the Mind | Mind in the Universe". [18] In 2021, the museum installed Shannon's sculpture, Finity, located at their entrance. Composed of five rotating stainless steel shapes, the sculpture stands at 25-ft while interacting with both the outdoor elements along with visitor participation. [19]
Throughout his career, Shannon used several painting techniques. At first he used traditional brush and ink, watercolor, or oil to create paintings reflecting concepts of three-dimensional projects and their settings such as sculptures in a landscape.
In the 1970s, Shannon developed his "Evaporations" technique where aqueous paint was poured on a sheet of paper. Over time (a few days up to a month) the water would evaporate, leaving the pigment in dry "lakes" of color. An important concept in this painting technique is that the pigment is held in "suspension" as if the color particles were floating in fluid. For Shannon, this was microscopic levitation with a visual record of the pigment's "descent" onto a paper "ground". It was also for him, a way to co-author a painting with nature, a lesson learned from John Cage.
Another co-authoring with nature is Shannon's "Trajectory" series. Here, Shannon tosses rubber balls wet with paint on inclined canvases capturing the natural parabolic curve of the ball's path in gravity.
As early as 1976, Shannon invented a mechanical pendulum paint dispenser. Controlled by the artist, the pendulum dispenser suspends over a canvas while releasing paint in discrete drops; a process Shannon describes as a "marriage of chaos and control". [20] Following a rotational or linear pathway, his "Pendulum Paintings" show various degrees of movement and images within its intricate layers. [12]
In mid-2015, Shannon experimented with another painting format he calls "Aerial Painting". His Aerial works allow viewers to observe a two-dimensional pattern on a canvas, which optically becomes a three-dimensional image. This process is achieved without the use of red and green glasses or other mechanical aids. "Looking 'through' a painting is something you do naturally," said Shannon. "It's the same as gazing at a distant horizon. Your brain re-orders space on the canvas, creating a natural 3D space, where objects hover in front and behind the canvas." An example of this technique is the painting, Mind Expansion, 2016. For Shannon, this is another form of levitation, an often recurring theme.
Shannon holds patents for:
The Video Airship is an ongoing project which weaves together several themes in Shannon's work. In the late 60's Shannon proposed spherical televisions linked to orbiting camera satellites. Buckminster Fuller had earlier proposed a 200-ft sphere covered with lights to display Earth to the United Nations. Shannon designed a LED-covered spherical blimp with cameras that could land at school campuses and other public locations to deliver education and at night host rave dances. [23] Aerovironment, Inc., the engineering firm founded by aeronautics legend Paul MacCready, found the design feasible; it can be aerodynamically controlled and can present clear computer video in daylight.
Richard Buckminster Fuller was an American architect, systems theorist, writer, designer, inventor, philosopher, and futurist. He styled his name as R. Buckminster Fuller in his writings, publishing more than 30 books and coining or popularizing such terms as "Spaceship Earth", "Dymaxion", "ephemeralization", "synergetics", and "tensegrity".
André Derain was a French artist, painter, sculptor and co-founder of Fauvism with Henri Matisse.
The Dymaxion car was designed by American inventor Buckminster Fuller during the Great Depression and featured prominently at Chicago's 1933/1934 World's Fair. Fuller built three experimental prototypes with naval architect Starling Burgess – using donated money as well as a family inheritance – to explore not an automobile per se, but the 'ground-taxiing phase' of a vehicle that might one day be designed to fly, land and drive – an "Omni-Medium Transport". Fuller associated the word Dymaxion with much of his work, a portmanteau of the words dynamic, maximum, and tension, to summarize his goal to do more with less.
Robert Delaunay was a French artist of the School of Paris movement; who, with his wife Sonia Delaunay and others, co-founded the Orphism art movement, noted for its use of strong colours and geometric shapes. His later works were more abstract. His key influence related to bold use of colour and a clear love of experimentation with both depth and tone.
Kenneth Duane Snelson was an American contemporary sculptor and photographer. His sculptural works, exemplified by Needle Tower, are composed of flexible and rigid components arranged according to the idea of 'tensegrity'. Snelson preferred the descriptive term floating compression.
Michael Heizer is an American land artist specializing in large-scale and site-specific sculptures. Working largely outside the confines of the traditional art spaces of galleries and museums, Heizer has redefined sculpture in terms of size, mass, gesture, and process. A pioneer of 20th-century land art or Earthworks movement, he is widely recognized for sculptures and environmental structures made with earth-moving equipment, which he began creating in the American West in 1967. He currently lives and works in Hiko, Nevada, and New York City.
International Klein Blue (IKB) is a deep blue hue first mixed by the French artist Yves Klein. IKB's visual impact comes from its heavy reliance on ultramarine, as well as Klein's often thick and textured application of paint to canvas.
Ellsworth Kelly was an American painter, sculptor, and printmaker associated with hard-edge painting, Color field painting and minimalism. His works demonstrate unassuming techniques emphasizing line, color and form, similar to the work of John McLaughlin and Kenneth Noland. Kelly often employed bright colors. He lived and worked in Spencertown, New York.
Lucio Fontana was an Argentine-Italian painter, sculptor and theorist. He's known as the founder of Spatialism and exponent of abstract painting as the first known artist to slash his canvases - which symbolizes an utter rejection of all prerequisites of art.
Allan Capron Houser or Haozous was a Chiricahua Apache sculptor, painter, and book illustrator born in Oklahoma. He was one of the most renowned Native American painters and Modernist sculptors of the 20th century.
Robert Natkin was an American abstract painter whose work is associated with abstract expressionism, color field painting, and Lyrical Abstraction.
Gerald Gladstone was a Canadian sculptor and painter.
Terry Alan Fox was an American conceptual artist known for his work in performance art, video, and sound. He was of the first generation conceptual artists and was a central participant in West Coast performance art, video and conceptual art movements of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Fox was active in San Francisco and in Europe, living in Europe in the latter portion of his life.
Joe Goode, is an American visual artist, known for his pop art paintings. Goode made a name for himself in Los Angeles, California, through his cloud imagery and milk bottle paintings which were associated with the Pop Art movement. The artist is also closely associated with Light and Space, a West Coast art movement of the early 1960s. He resides in Los Angeles, California.
The Geoscope was a proposal by Buckminster Fuller around 1960 to create a 200-foot-diameter (61 m) globe that would be covered in colored lights so that it could function as a large spherical display. It was envisioned that the Geoscope would be connected to computers which would allow it to display both historical and current data, and enable people to visualize large scale patterns around the world. Several projects by his students to build a "miniature Earth", starting with a 20-foot version at Cornell University in 1952, were precursors of the Geoscope proposal. Before proposing the Geoscope, Fuller had invented the Dymaxion map, a novel map projection for the whole Earth.
Victoria Barrett Fuller is an American artist, sculptor, natural science illustrator, and award-winning singer, songwriter, and musician.
Elizabeth A. T. Smith is an American art historian, museum curator, writer, and presently the executive director of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation. She has formerly held positions as a curator at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA), the chief curator and deputy director of programs at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and the executive director, curatorial affairs, at the Art Gallery of Ontario. She is the author of numerous books on art and architecture, including Blueprints for Modern Living: History and Legacy of the Case Study Houses; Lee Bontecou: A Retrospective, Helen Frankenthaler: Composing with Color, 1962–63, and many others.
The Fly's Eye Dome was a structure designed in 1965 by R. Buckminster Fuller. Inspired by the eye of a fly, Fuller designed the dome as his idea of the affordable, portable home of the future, with windows and openings in the dome to hold solar panels and systems for water collection, thus allowing the dome to be self sufficient. Before his death in 1983, he hand-built three prototypes of the design:
Clark Richert was an American contemporary artist largely known for his colorful geometric paintings, but whose practice included animation, video, intervention, happenings, and publishing. He also developed Drop City, an artist community near Trinidad, Colorado. He is considered to be one of Colorado's most important artists.
Otto Fried was a German-born American artist who worked and lived in New York City and Paris.