Glen Seator
Visual artist

Glen Seator

The basics
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Visual artist
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
1956(Beardstown, United States of America)
Death:
2002
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Introduction Early life Education Career and exhibitions Significant works Awards and honors Collections Death Legacy
The details
Biography

Introduction

Glen Seator (1956—2002) was an American visual artist and conceptual sculptor.

Early life

Born in 1956 in Beardstown, Illinois to mother, Dr. Lynette Hubbard Seator (d. 2012), a professor of Modern Languages, and father Gordon Douglas Seator (d. 1988), a judge. During his lifetime, Seator had three sisters, Patricia, Penelope and Pamela.

Education

Seator received an MFA from SUNY Purchase in 1989, and a BFA at the Massachusetts College of Art, Boston in 1984. Prior to that he attended the Cooper Union, New York, from 1981-1982.

Career and exhibitions

The artist was well known in the 1990s for his architecture-inspired installations and architectural interventions. His work has been compared to other conceptual sculptors, Robert Gober and Charles Ray and has affinities to some of the work of Bruce Nauman. In his full-scale architectural reconstructions, the artist addressed the delicate balance of place, power and position. The art historian Adam Weinberg has written that Seator's sculptural work had "a dramatic kinesthetic effect which may bring on vertigo."

He also produced sculptural procedures, process artworks, such as the sweep-action piece, Untitled (Auditorium Installation (1993) at MoMA PS1 in Queens, NY, as well as the transformation of a townhouse he owned in the historical neighborhood of Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn into a work of installation art. In addition, Seator created large panoramic photo-installations dealing with the landscape and "emptiness" of the desert, the vernacular architecture of Echo Park, Los Angeles and the pristine architectural storefronts of Beverly Hills, California. Seator's first solo exhibition was at the SculptureCenter, New York, followed by major installations in Warsaw, Vienna, San Francisco, London and Basel.In 2000-2001 his work was featured in a two-person exhibition, The Architectural Unconscious: James Casebere and Glen Seator, at the Addison Gallery of American Art at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. The show traveled to the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia.

Seator had solo exhibitions at the Kunstraum Wien, Vienna, Austria; Kunsthalle Basel; White Columns; and at several art galleries including Jay Joplin/White Cube, London; Burnett Miller Gallery, Los Angeles; and Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles. His work was included in group exhibitions at Mary Boone Gallery, New York; Greene Naftali Gallery, New York; the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, NY among others.

Significant works

Interrupted Sweeping, (1993). At PS1 Museum in Long Island City, Queens, Seator enacted a long-term procedural action in which he used sweeping compound to sweep the floor of the auditorium gallery. In time, the piles accumulated into larger and larger arrays of material. These piles of material held in a "perpetual state of interuption" were individually lit from the grid of ceiling lights that had been lowered on cords to hover just above the piles of dirt.

Preventative Measures, (1994). Installation at the National Gallery of Contemporary Art (Zaçheta), in Warsaw, Poland, Seator meticulously covered the ornate Neo-Renaissance -style salon walls with horizontal strips of masking tape, creating "an etherial yet overwhelming image of itself." The installation covered 8,000 square feet of wall space.

N.Y.O. + B. (New York Office and Ballroom), (1996). Commissioned by the New York Kunsthalle, was a full-scale replication of an office and bathroom, tilted on its side. The 10,000 pound off-kilter structure was anchored to the floor with three steel cables. In his essay, Glen Seator's Daring Desiring Machines Terry R. Myers describes the work as "dangerous miminalism," and compares Seator's work to that of Bruce Nauman and Michael Asher.

B.D.O. (Breuer Director's Office), (1997). Installation commissioned by the Whitney Museum of American Art for the 1997 Whitney Biennial, was a reconstruction of a full-scale office tilted at a 45-degree angle; an exact replication of that of the museum director's office. Art critic David Joselit wrote that the artwork enabled spectators to "carefully scrutinize" reality.

Approach, (1997). Commissioned by the Capp Street Project, San Francisco, and replicated to scale an elevated version of the street outside the gallery.

Fifteen Sixty One, (1999). Commissioned by the Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills, CA, in 1999, was an exact replica of a check-cashing store located in a Latino neighborhood on Sunset Boulevard. The installation was one of three works created specifically for the gallery in a solo exhibition entitled, Three.

Places for Balanced Sculptures, (2000). Commissioned by the Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover, Massachusetts and the Institute of Fine Arts|Institute of Fine Art, Philadelphia, was composed of three large-scale sculptural corner forms, each balanced on point. Seator replicated to scale a corner of the USAirways terminal at Boston Logan Airport; a corner of the Addison Gallery; and a corner of the Friendly's sandwich and ice cream shop in Andover. While this work references Gordon Matta Clark, it is distinct from it in that Seator reconstructs architectural fragments in an additive manner, whereas Clark cut off and represented fragments through a subtractive process of selective demolition.

This by the Light of That (2001-2002). A collaborative project with the Canadian designer Bruce Mau at Schindler House, designed by the architect Rudolph Schindler. The exhibition was sponsored by the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, incorporating neon signage, typography and language, and included a series of mass-media print forms including 25 outdoor art billboards. The project critiqued the advertising industry, and shed light on the role of corporate identity.

Awards and honors

Seator was awarded grants and fellowships from the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, the Soros Foundation, and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in 2000. The Getty Museum Institute honored him a Scholar-in-Residence from 2000-2001. He received a fellowship from the Edward F. Albee Foundation in 1990. His work was the subject of a symposium, Moving Things, Moving Places: The Work of artist Glen Seator, at the Getty Research Institute of the Getty Museum in 2002. He received two fellowships from the MacDowell Colony in 1990 and 1994.

Collections

Seator's work is included in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, among other public and private collections.

Death

Seator died in an accidental fall from his roof while repairing the chimney of his three-story townhouse in Brooklyn, New York.

Legacy

The Seator Foundation was established in 2004, and has been working with Steidl Verlag Publishers on a catalogue raisonn of his work.