Puff Piece On inflatable art.
Puff Piece On inflatable art.
Conceptual art is sometimes accused of lacking substance. There is at least one particular field where the detractors would be, in a technical sense, correct: inflatable art.
Since the 1960s, artists have been exploring the potential to create sculptures that are at once monumental and fragile. Warhol’s Silver Clouds (1966) uses a proprietary mix of air and helium to make a scene in which metallic pillows float lazily around a room. Anish Kapoor’s abstract sculptures grow to fill vast spaces, inspiring a sense of awe and contemplation at their overwhelming scale.
Inflatable art can be playful too, channeling the nostalgic associations we have with blow-up objects and fun. Piero Manzoni’s Artist’s Breath (1960) consists of a balloon inflated by the artist, satirizing our fetish...