09 september 2019

John Chamberlain #5


John Chamberlain's former studio, 10th and Cocoanut Ave, Sarasota, USA.



"When John Chamberlain moved to Sarasota in 1980, he first lived on a boat in the bay. He was by then a world-famous artist. His controversial “car crash” sculptures had revolutionized the art form back in the early 1960s and now he was entering the mid-phase of his career, the period that would see his greatest—and largest—works.

What he needed most of all was room. So he purchased an abandoned warehouse on 10th Street, just a block or so from the bay. With a high-ceilinged, 18,000-square-foot space to create his increasingly monumental work, he branched out from metal to other materials, including foam rubber, and began experimenting with photography. Several years later he built an airy, tree-shaded home, designed by local architect Yehuda Inbar, on an adjacent lot.

The Chamberlain complex became the epicenter of all that was hip and cool in Sarasota. A tribe of young assistants was always on hand, helping Chamberlain in the creation of his work. Our arts editor Kay Kipling vividly recalls a morning interview with Chamberlain in the studio. The artist drank Courvoisier while directing the beehive of activity. Sometimes his famous contemporaries—Rauschenberg, Lichtenstein, and, on one memorable occasion, Andy Warhol—would show up.

Chamberlain moved most of his activity to New York’s Shelter Island as age began to creep up on him. When he died in 2011, the Sarasota place was already abandoned and shuttered. Now with final details of the estate being cleared up, it has officially come on the market."
(bron: Sarasota Magazine)

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