James Turrell’s The Color Inside

James Turrell’s The Color Inside

The University of Texas at Austin

James Turrell, The Color Inside, 2013. Black basalt, plaster, and LED lights, 224 x 348 x 276 inches. Commission, The University of Texas at Austin, 2013. Photo by Florian Holzherr. Courtesy of Landmarks, the public art program of The University of Texas at Austin. © Landmarks.
October 25, 2013
James Turrell’s The Color Inside

The University of Texas at Austin
Student Activity Center
Third Floor, Rooftop Garden
2201 Speedway at 22nd Street
Austin, Texas 78712

www.utexas.edu

The Color Inside, a permanent Skyspace by renowned artist James Turrell, has opened on the rooftop garden of the Student Activity Center at The University of Texas at Austin.

Commissioned by Landmarks, the public art program of The University of Texas at Austin, the Skyspace is an elliptical structure of white plaster with an opening in the ceiling through which visitors, seated on a bench, can see the sky. The Skyspace features custom LED lights that unleash brilliant washes of color at sunrise and sunset.

James Turrell, known as the “sculptor of light,” is considered one of the most influential artists living in the world. In naming The Color Inside, Turrell said, “I was thinking about what you see inside, and inside the sky, and what the sky holds within it that we don’t see the possibility of in our regular life.”

The saturation and vibrancy of colors is further intensified by the intimacy of the space, which seats up to twenty-five people.

Andrée Bober, founding director of Landmarks, selected James Turrell for this site-specific installation. The university’s student body was developing the building program for the Student Activity Center, which opened in 2011. On the list of things the students imagined for the center was a “reflection room.”

“Beyond introducing an important example of contemporary art, The Color Inside offers beauty, grace, and inspiration to its visitors,” said Bober. “The Skyspace is accessible to audiences of many backgrounds and interests, even those who aren’t familiar with contemporary art. It encourages the kind of quiet reflection that cultivates attention.”

The optimal viewing times for experiencing Turrell’s art are at sunrise and sunset, during light sequences that last approximately an hour. The Skyspace is available for observation during other times of day as a quiet, contemplative space for the campus community and visitors.

All viewings of The Color Inside are free and open to the public. Hours of operation shift throughout the year. Free reservations are encouraged around the opening of the Skyspace, which was unveiled on October 19. For hours, reservations, and more information, visit www.turrell.utexas.edu.

To view a video about James Turrell’s The Color Inside, a Skyspace commissioned by Landmarks for The University of Texas at Austin, visit youtu.be/3RQ3ZmpP6zE. This video is narrated by Lynn Herbert, former senior curator at the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston.

About James Turrell
James Turrell, who is known for his use of light as a medium, is one of the world’s most highly regarded living artists. His work has been the subject of hundreds of exhibitions for which he has received prestigious awards from the Guggenheim, Lannan, and MacArthur foundations. In 2013 he became the first artist to have three concurrent solo exhibitions at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and the Guggenheim Museum, New York. Turrell’s most ambitious project is Roden Crater, an observatory created inside an extinct volcano in Arizona.

About Landmarks
Landmarks is the public art program of The University of Texas at Austin. In 2008, Landmarks was launched with the purpose of developing a cohesive collection of public art from a curatorial perspective. Its projects are located throughout the main campus and are viewed by thousands of people every day. The first initiative brought to the university twenty-eight modern and contemporary sculptures on long-term loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Since then, more than thirty works of art have beautified the main campus, engaging visitors and the university community with art of the highest quality. Recent installations include works by Sol LeWitt and an architectural projection by Ben Rubin (see press kit for complete list of artists and projects). Growth of the university’s public art collection is supported by a policy that sets aside one to two percent of ongoing capital improvement projects for an acquisitions fund, one example being Turrell’s new Skyspace.

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