Currently on view (Atrium Terrace)

Advice to Space V

1993Steel
305 x 143 x 207 cm

Eduardo Chillida studied architecture in Madrid from 1943 to 1947, before deciding to turn to painting and ultimately—after moving to Paris in 1948—to sculpture. His early architectural training is apparent in the underlying structure, attention to materials, and careful planning of spatial relationships that characterize his sculptures. Indeed, Chillida conceived of sculpture in relation to architecture: "To construct is to build in space. This is sculpture, and generally speaking sculpture and architecture," he declared.[1] Over the course of five decades, he established himself as one of the most important Basque artists of the 20th century and an internationally recognized figure in postwar sculpture, leaving behind a rich legacy in monumental, site-specific public sculptures as well as more conventionally sized works.

The materials Chillida turned to consistently informed his investigations of conceptual questions and metaphysical concerns. His early sculptures in Paris were executed in stone and plaster—materials suited to his study of archaic works in the Louvre—and were drawn from the human figure as well as natural forms. Upon his return to the Basque Country in 1951, he began to focus more on the metamorphosis of space and the abstract definition of spatial volume through form, and turned to iron and then wood and steel-materials that represented Basque traditions in industry, architecture, and agriculture, and also recalled the region's distinctive landscape and what Chillida described as its "dark light."

Advice to Space V (Consejo al espacio V, 1993) was originally designed to sit before the Neue Pinakothek in Munich when the first studies for the project were created in 1987. (Ten years later the artist composed Looking for Light II [Buscando la luz II] for the nearby Pinakothek der Moderne.) This piece, constructed from enormous sheets of steel, combines an organic quality with a lightness that is unique to Chillida's works in this medium. The structure suggests a kind of chimney, a void of fire and heat that infuses the surrounding space with vital energy. Like Embrace XI (Besarkada XI, 1996), also in the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao collection, this work demonstrates the connection between Chillida's work and nature.

1. Eduardo Chillida, conversation with Mario Terès, in Christa Lichtenstein, Chillida und die Musik. Baumeister von Zeit und Klang (Cologne: Wienand, 1997), p. 73; cited in Chillida, 1948–1998, exh. cat. (Madrid: Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, 1998), p. 62.

Source(s): Kosme de Barañano. "Eduardo Chillida." In Guggenheim Museum Bilbao Collection. Bilbao: Guggenheim Museum Bilbao; Madrid: TF Editores, 2009.

Original title

Advice to Space V

Date

1993

Medium/Materials

Steel

Dimensions

305 x 143 x 207 cm

Credit line

Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa