Chimera 14-12-26 (3)
Maker
Brown, Marshall
American, b. 1973
Date2014
MediumCollage
Dimensionsimage: 10 ¼ in x 10 ¾ in; paper: 17 in x 14 in; mat: 19 in x 16 ? in; frame: 20 ? in x 17 ? in
Credit LineGift of the artist
Object number2018:6
Collections
About the ArtistAs a practicing architect, professor of architecture, artist, and theoretician, Marshall Brown believes that architecture is a “cultural medium,” with the capacity to connect concrete pasts with imagined futures. In his series Chimera (2014), Brown cuts and pastes images of twentieth century postmodernist, dadaist and constructivist architecture to create new urban landscapes. The word chimera has two meanings: one is a fire-breathing beast from Greek mythology comprised of lion, goat, and serpent body parts; the other is a more nuanced term that is synonymous with illusion or fantasy. Brown’s works takes on both interpretations of the word, combining historical and iconic buildings into new fantastical realms of impossible structural standing.- Alternative Process
Marshall Brown has been included in exhibitions at Western Exhibitions, Chicago (2016); the Chicago Architecture Biennial (2017); the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit; and the Architecture and Design Museum in Los Angeles; among others. His work is held in the collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA and the MoCP. He has been an Associate Professor of Architecture at Princeton University since 2018.