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Title

Old woman in bed

2000-2002

Artist

Ron Mueck

Australia, England

1958 –

  • Details

    Date
    2000-2002
    Media category
    Mixed media
    Materials used
    mixed media
    Dimensions
    25.4 x 94.0 x 53.9 cm
    Signature & date

    Not signed. Not dated.

    Credit
    Purchased 2003
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    9.2003
    Copyright
    © Ron Mueck, courtesy Anthony D'Offay Gallery

    Reproduction requests

    Artist information
    Ron Mueck

    Works in the collection

    1

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  • About

    Encountering Ron Mueck’s sculptures is like suddenly being in a contemporary version of ‘Gulliver’s travels’: everything looks real and familiar but the scale is wrong. Giant boys and pregnant women tower over us, small men row boats and lie dead, a swaddled baby is shrunk to miniature size. In ‘Old woman in bed’ a frail elderly woman lies under a blanket on a gallery plinth, her small scale increasing her vulnerability as we loom over her. This is one of Mueck’s most poignant works: the woman seems only to have a tenuous hold on life as she shrinks from this world into whatever comes next. It is imbued with the pathos of our own experiences of the death of elderly friends and relatives just as it foretells our own inevitable demise.

    As with all of Mueck’s sculpture, this figure is more than life-like. The moist eyes, veins just below the skin and flushed cheeks all add up to an near palpable sense of life, or in this work of life ebbing. We almost expect to hear a rattling breath as we look at the work for signs of the life that is about to end. The realism of his sculptures is like a series of three-dimensional freeze frames taken from the world, life momentarily paused but still fully evident. This filmic metaphor is not inappropriate as Mueck has worked as a modelmaker for television and film. While we know these people are sculptures, it is almost impossible not to touch them to make sure that they are indeed not real. Mueck’s deployment of scale distances this realism just as it entices us by the sense of wonder it evokes. The expressions of his sculptural subjects are subtly exaggerated to increase their emotional impact; indeed their heightened emotional and psychological states and the response this triggers in the viewer is the subject of Mueck’s art rather than their extraordinary verisimilitude. His figures are almost always alone and there is a strong sense of isolation and vulnerability to many of his works.

    Mueck’s realism is perhaps sculpture’s riposte to the virtual reality that digital technologies have made possible. Filmic and digital photographic recreations of past worlds, mythical places and future possibilities have stretched the real in so many directions as to make it no longer a viable visual category. There is no digital sleight of hand to Mueck’s work, however, as he makes his sculptures traditionally, applying clay to a framework, modelling the figure until he has the form to create a mould and then casting the final work. It is a labour-intensive and highly skilled process. The resulting works seem to have the weight of the history of sculptural realism behind them, just as they seem to mark its end by leaving it with nowhere further to go.

    © Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection Handbook, 2006

  • Audio

    Untitled (old woman in bed) - Ron Mueck 3:10

  • Exhibition history

    Shown in 8 exhibitions

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 8 publications

    • Lisa Baldissera, Ron Mueck, 'The art of excess: five movements', pg.43-47, Melbourne, 2010, 42 (colour illus.), 44 (colour illus.), 46-47. illustration on page 42 is a detail

    • Sidney Lawrence (Curator), Directions: Ron Mueck, Washington D.C., 2002, (illus.). illustration is of the National Gallery of Canada's edition

    • John McDonald, The Sydney Morning Herald, 'On our selection: a moonlit mix', pg. 16-7, Sydney, 21 Feb 2009-22 Feb 2009, 16 (colour illus.), 17. Review of 'Great Collections' exhibition.

    • John McPhee, Great collections, Sydney, 2008, 120 (colour illus.).

    • Robert Rosenblum, Ron Mueck, 'Ron Mueck's bodies and souls', pg.41-78, Paris, 2005, 64, 74-75 (colour illus.), 111 (colour illus.). this work is not in the exhibition but is referred to and illustrated in the catalogue. illustration is of the National Gallery of Canada's edition

    • Jill Sykes (Editor), Look, 'Moving sculpture, taking the sculpture off the plinth and putting it back in the real world' Tony Bond and Jill Sykes, pg. 29-31, Sydney, Aug 2003, 30 (colour illus.). illustration is a detail

    • The Hague Sculpture, De overkant = Down Under: den Haag Sculptuur 07, Rotterdam, 2007, 150-51 (colour illus.). illustration is a detail

    • Wayne Tunnicliffe, Contemporary: Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection, 'Reality bytes', pg.382-423, Sydney, 2006, 408-9 (colour illus.). illustration on page 409 is a detail