NEW YORK. ENGAGING IN a dialogue with the seventeenth-century Italian “father of modern science,” the London-based artist
Aleksandra Mir will present The Seduction of Galileo Galilei (2011) at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Mir’s new video work
documents a Galileo-inspired gravitational experiment along with a selection of collage from Mir’s series The Dream and the Promise
(2008-09), combining religious iconography with that of space travel. The exhibition is curated by Whitney curator Carter Foster. It will
be on view in the Lobby Gallery from October 20, 2011 through February 19, 2012.
Mir’s projects are typically interactive and draw on her interests in technology, religion, media, and concepts of distance and place. Her
work on projects, performances, and publications takes her into communities and art spaces around the world; a dual citizen of the
United States and Sweden, Mir has lived in New York City, Palermo, and London. In their ample scale, affinity for spectacle, and
engagement with landscape, Mir’s works often recall the site-specific land art of such artists as Robert Smithson and Michael Heizer.
In The Seduction of Galileo Galilei (2011), Mir conducts a dialogue with the seventeenth-century Italian scientist, mathematician, and
philosopher. The documentary video on view, set to a Baroque soundtrack, takes the narrative of Galileo’s achievement and historical
authority as its starting point-complicating and extending the cultural myth with which Mir’s playful, participatory experiment engages.
The artist performs a gravitational experiment inspired by Galileo’s apocryphal test of the law of falling bodies. Rather than dropping
objects from the top of the Leaning Tower in Pisa, as Galileo is said to have done in his observations of gravity’s effect on objects of
differing masses, Mir and her team attempted to build their own tower. In the gravel pit of a go-kart track in Stouffville, Ontario, Mir
worked with crane operators and volunteers to stack tires as high as possible in a precarious, lilting spire.
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) was a devout Catholic; however, his investigations into astronomy and cosmology, particularly his
advocacy of Copernicus’s theory that the Earth orbits the sun, set him at odds with the Church and its doctrines, leading to a charge of
heresy in 1633. As Sarah Robayo Sheridan, the curator who commissioned this work for Mercer Union, Toronto, described the artist’s
role: “A corrupting femme fatale, [Mir] solicits an intellectual affair with a man almost four centuries her senior, in order to explore,
exploit, and liberate the void in the telling of the myth.”
Also on view are collages from Mir’s 2008-09 series The Dream and the Promise. Interweaving and juxtaposing depictions of religious
figures and iconography with images of space and space travel, these works relate to the artist’s question, “If angels and astronauts
share the same sky, isn’t it time they were introduced?” Her seamless melding of the parallel visual vocabularies of science and faith
alludes to the complicated relationship between the two traditions, and their different ways of understanding our world.
The Seduction of Galileo Galilei was commissioned by Mercer Union: A Centre for Contemporary Art, Toronto.
About the Artist
Aleksandra Mir was born in Lubin, Poland, in 1967, and is a dual citizen of Sweden and the United States. She received her BFA at the
School for Visual Arts, New York in 1992, and from 1994 to 1996 studied cultural anthropology at the Graduate Faculty of the New
School for Social Research, New York. Mir currently lives and works in London, England. Since 1995 her work has been shown in
numerous solo and group exhibitions in the United States and Europe including the Venice Biennale (2009) and the Whitney Biennial
(2004). Mir has also published many artists’ books. Her work is included in important public collections such as the Tate Modern,
London, and Kunsthaus Zürich, as well as the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Mir’s work can also be seen in Singular
Visions, on the fifth floor of the Museum.