Inversion was a 2005 artwork by sculptors Dan Havel and Dean Ruck of Houston Alternative Art.
Inversion | |
---|---|
Artist |
|
Year | 2005 (2005) |
Location | Houston, Texas, U.S. |
Havel and Ruck altered two buildings owned by the Art League of Houston on the corner of Montrose Boulevard and Willard Street. The exterior skins of the houses were peeled off and used to create a large vortex that funneled into the small central hallway connecting the two buildings and eventually exited through a small hole into an adjacent courtyard.[1] Inversion has become one of Houston's most well-known, albeit vanished, sculptures. The structure was later demolished to make way for a new Art League building.[2][3][4]
Art League Houston owned the two houses and had used them for art classes and exhibitions for over 30 years. The organisation commissioned Havel and Ruck to transform them into an artwork in demolition. The sculpture was opened on May 21, 2005, and was visible from Montrose Boulevard until its demolition the next month.[1]
Years later, the artwork continues to be cited on design blogs.[2]
In 2009, the sculptors cut an egg-shaped piece from another house in a work called Give and Take.[2]
In 2011, Havel and Ruck created a work called Fifth Ward Jam, taking planks from the interior of other dilapidated houses in Houston and fixing them to the outside in shapes like an explosion. This was compared to the earlier work Inversion.[citation needed]
Neartown, Houston | |||
---|---|---|---|
Geography |
| ||
Education |
| ||
Landmarks |
| ||
History |
| ||
This list is incomplete. High School for the Performing and Visual Arts (HSPVA) was in the Neartown area from 1982 to 2019. Neartown is within the Houston Community College (HCC) service area, though no campuses are operated there. Within a section of the Neartown Association boundaries previously shown on its website are: the Houston Contemporary Arts Museum, the Administration/Glassel School buildings of the Museum of Fine Arts Houston (MFAH), First Presbyterian Church, and Presbyterian School. The current (as of 2019) map does not indicate any territory south of I-69/US-59 as being in Neartown. Gulf Coast Archive and Museum was previously in Neartown. |