Excited States: Ozone

Excited States: Ozone

2006
Artist
Jude Tallichet, American, 1954
Born: Louisville, KY
Work Locations: Queens, NY
Medium
polished bronze
Accession Number
2014.298
Credit Line
Gift from Vicki and Kent Logan to the Collection of the Denver Art Museum
Jude Tallichet (American). Excited States: Ozone. 2006. polished bronze. Gift from Vicki and Kent Logan to the Collection of the Denver Art Museum. 2014.298.
Dimensions
height: 49 in, 124.4600 cm; diameter: 7 in, 17.7800 cm; base width: 7 in, 17.7800 cm
Edition
3, 1AP
Department
Modern and Contemporary Art
Collection
Modern and Contemporary Art

"Excited States: Ozone" part of an installation titled "Could Have Been a Revolution". The installation refers specifically to Vladimir Tatlin’s unrealized, iconic "Monument to the Third International" (1920) and more generally to myriad failed schemes and revolutions. Tallichet has described the elements of the installation—lights, gasoline cans, tanks used to hold compressed gasses, and the books depicted in the wallpaper she designed—as common tools used by contemporary revolutionaries and terrorists. Casting the three-dimensional objects in bronze effectively monumentalizes them and the defunct movements they represent.

© Jude Tallichet

Exhibition History
  • Excited States: Ozone/Oxygen was shown for the first time as part of Could Have Been a Revolution at Sara Meltzer Gallery in New York in 2006. Tallichet has had numerous solo exhibitions at the gallery since 2000. Tallichet's work has frequently been shown at New York's illustrious alternative art spaces, such as White Columns, Art in General, Exit Art, and PS1 Contemporary Art Center. In 2004 Tallichet created a site-specific installation for Socrates Sculpture Park, in Queens.