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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art News > Giant pigeon sculpture will land on the High Line this autumn
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Giant pigeon sculpture will land on the High Line this autumn

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 1 August 2024 11:33
Published 1 August 2024
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New Yorkers may not all agree on which urban critter is the more fitting symbol for their city—the resilient rat, the nuke-proof cockroach or the scrappy pigeon—but the latter may soon have an edge in the form of a 16ft-tall monument perched atop the High Line elevated park on the city’s west side. The next commission to alight above Tenth Avenue on the park’s prominent plinth will be Dinosaur (2024), a hyperrealist aluminium sculpture of a pigeon by Iván Argote, the Bogotá-born, Paris-based artist.

“The name Dinosaur makes reference to the sculpture’s scale and to the pigeon’s ancestors who millions of years ago dominated the globe, as we humans do today,” Argote said in a statement. “The name also serves as reference to the dinosaur’s extinction. Like them, one day we won’t be around any more, but perhaps a remnant of humanity will live on—as pigeons do—in the dark corners and gaps of future worlds. I feel this sculpture could generate an uncanny feeling of attraction, seduction and fear among the inhabitants of New York.”

Like many New Yorkers, pigeons are not native to the region. They are believed to have been brought to the city in the 17th century by European settlers. Now, the city’s pigeon population is estimated to be larger than its human population, with around nine million birds compared to the nearly eight million people living in the city.

Iván Argote, Dinosaur, 2024 (rendering). A High Line Plinth commission. On view October 2024-spring 2026. Image courtesy of the artist and the High Line.

“Iván has a charming ability as an artist to take something familiar and make us consider it anew in profound ways,” Cecilia Alemani, the director and chief curator of High Line Art, said in a statement. “His sculpture for the High Line Plinth adds a critical yet funny perspective to the ongoing dialogue of public art.”

Critiques of conventional monuments and public art—and a fondness for pigeons—recur throughout Argote’s work, which has included documenting the removal of a statue of French colonial administrator Joseph Gallieni from a public plaza in Paris to planters made to resemble historical monuments. When he was nominated for France’s top contemporary art prize, the Prix Marcel Duchamp, in 2022, Argote’s installation at the Centre Pompidou featured videos of monuments being removed and disassembled projected in a room strewn with seemingly toppled obelisks.

Argote’s prominent pigeon will be the fourth High Line Plinth commission, following works by Pamela Rosenkranz, Simone Leigh and Sam Durant. Rosenkranz’s sculpture of a neon-pink tree, Old Tree (2023), will remain on view until September. Argote’s Dinosaur will be unveiled the following month and remain on view for 18 months.

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