1. Research Kapoor's work in order to discuss whether it is conceptual art or not. Explain your answer, using a definition of conceptual art.
Conceptual Art is art in which emphasis is placed on the means and processes of producing art objects rather than on the objects themselves and in which the various tools and techniques, as photographs, photocopies, video records, and the construction of environments and earthworks, are used to convey the message to the spectator. (The free dictionary, 2011)
He is one of Britain’s leading talents in Conceptual art. Conceptual art is seen more flashy and savvy, whereas Kapoor combines the idea of thoughtfulness, creativity and a traditional respect for beauty, even though the resultant forms are non-traditional.
"Shooting into the Corner" consists of a cannon developed by Kapoor together with a team of engineers. A pneumatic compressor shoots 11-kilogram balls of wax into the corner across the room; all in all, 20 tons of wax will be "fired away" throughout the exhibition run. Loud aggression on the one hand and silent growth on the other give the piece tension, sensuality, and compelling power. (MAK - Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art, n.d)
2. Research 3 quite different works by Kapoor from countries outside New Zealand to discuss the ideas behind the work. Include images of each work on your blog.
Anish Kapoor's Sky Mirror is a breath-taking, 35-foot-diameter concave mirror made of polished stainless steel. Standing nearly three stories tall at the Fifth Avenue entrance to the Channel Gardens at Rockefeller Centre, Sky Mirror offers a dazzling experience of light and architecture, presenting viewers with a vivid inversion of the skyline featuring the historic landmark building at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. (Anish Kapoor Mirror Sky, 2006)

Marsyas is a massive construction that filled Tate's Turbine Hall for four years. The sculpture has three steel rings joined together by a single span of PVC membrane. Two of the rings are positioned at each end of the hall and the third is suspended beneath the two in the middle over a bridge.
Seemingly wedged into place, the geometry generated by these three rigid steel structures determines the sculpture’s overall form, a shift from vertical to horizontal and back to vertical again. (The Unilever Series: Anish Kapoor, 2003)
A process artwork substituting the machine's gesture for the artist's, My Red Homeland is self-sufficient: a mechanical arm revolves slowly, thereby pushing 25 tonnes of red wax. This "homeland" is first of all a dynamic landscape, intense and profound, combining the oily density of the material with the circle's purity. Anish Kapoor disappears behind the logic of an artwork that, virtually like an autonomous creative force, traces a sacred form in the heart of the shapeless. (My Red Homeland, 2003)
The ideas in each work are very different from eachother. In "Sky Mirrors" he tries to 'dazzle' people with an experience of light and architecture. This stainless steel concave mirror presents people with an inverted view of the skyline giving the idea of reflection and an experience of being close to the sky.
The idea behind Marsyas shows a shift from vertical to horizontal and back to vertical again. We see this by havng two of the rings are positioned at each end of the hall and the third is suspended beneath the two in the middle over a bridge.
My Red Homeland shows the idea of traceing a sacred form in the heart of the shapeless. We see the shapeless as the huge pile of wax in the middle of the room and the circle thats been carved into it as the sacred form.
3. Discuss the large scale 'site specific' work that has been installed on a private site in New Zealand.
4. Where is Kapoor's work in New Zealand? What are its forms and materials? What are the ideas behind the work?
'Site Specific' is located on a 1,000 acre private estate outdoor art gallery in Kaipara Bay north of Auckland. Made up of a custom red PVC-coated polyester fabric by Ferrari Textiles which are supported by two red steel ellipses that are about 42,750kg each. The fabric alone weighs 7,200kg". It was designed to withstand the high winds that blew in from the sea off the northwest coast of the North Island.
5. Comment on which work by Kapoor is your favourite, and explain why. Are you personally attracted more by the ideas or the aesthetics of the work?
Reference List:
http://www.royalacademy.org.uk
http://www.robgarrettcfa.com/thefarm.htm/
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/conceptual+art
http://www.e-flux.com/shows/view/6532
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/kapoor/default.htm
http://www.publicartfund.org/pafweb/projects/06/kapoor/kapoor-06.html
http://www.monumenta.com/en/2011/medias/view/12/my-red-homeland-2003
http://www.monumenta.com/en/2011/medias/view/12/my-red-homeland-2003