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Denver  Art  Museum  Acquires  Two  Site-Specific  Works

February
2021

The Denver Art Museum (DAM) recently announced the acquisition of two complementary, site-specific installations by Shantell Martin, currently on view at the DAM in the exhibition Shantell Martin: Words and Lines. The museum also announced the extension of the popular exhibition (originally slated to close January 31, 2021) until May 31, 2021. Acquired with funds from the DAM’s Volunteer Acquisitions Endowment Fund, the two works are now part of the DAM’s collection of modern and contemporary art.

“The Denver Art Museum is thrilled to purchase Martin’s two site-specific installations for the permanent collection, to ensure that the museum will be able to share them with current and future visitors,” said Christoph Heinrich, Frederick and Jan Mayer Director of the DAM. “These works have become visitor favorites and I’m thrilled to add Shantell Martin and her work to our collection.”

The two acquired works, The Elevator and Column, will both remain on extended view in the atrium of the museum’s Daniel Libeskind-designed Hamilton Building for visitors to experience. The Elevator allows viewers to physically enter one of Martin’s signature drawings. Wrapping the interior of one of the DAM’s elevators with vinyl from floor to ceiling, The Elevator transforms the ordinary task of moving up and down between floors into an immersive art experience. With phrases such as “Why are you here?,” and “Let’s help each other rise,” Martin’s work invites audiences to reflect on their active role in the museum. Upon exiting the elevator, visitors can see a continuation of Martin’s drawings on the column located on each level of the Hamilton Building. Titled Column, this installation depicts stick figures standing on the shoulders of one another in a communal gesture of support, helping each other ascend the four-story column. The column drawings amplify the artist’s presence throughout the museum and highlight Martin’s idea that art elevates individuals in limitless ways and in unexpected places.

“We are honored to support the museum in the acquisition of these two works,” said Frieda Levine, Volunteer President at the DAM. “The central location of the pieces and the meaning behind these works make this acquisition incredibly special to the volunteers, museum visitors, staff, and the community as a whole.”

Since its founding in 1978, the department of modern and contemporary art at the DAM has grown from fledgling roots into a collection of more than 7,000 artworks made between 1900 and today. Areas of strength in the historic collection include representation of artists from the School of Paris, Alfred Stieglitz’s cohort of artists, and Surrealism. The distinguished mid-century collection includes works by Robert Motherwell and Herbert Bayer, as well as paintings by pioneering women artists of Abstract Expressionism. Contemporary internationally renowned artists include new German painters and young British artists, as well as Chinese, Latin American, and American artists. Since 2015, the collection has been overseen and curated by Rebecca R. Hart, Vicki and Kent Logan Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art.

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