The Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University presents Leo Villareal. Cosmos, an ongoing exhibition paying homage to the late Cornell astronomy professor Carl Sagan, Cosmos is the most recent site-specific installation by New York–based artist Leo Villareal (born 1967), a pioneer in the use of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and computer-driven imagery. His signature pieces explore complex movement and dazzling patterns created by points of light using his own computer software.
Leo Villareal, Cosmos, 2012. White LED lights, custom software, and electrical hardware. Acquired through the generosity of Lisa and Richard Baker, Class of 1988. (Photo: James Ewing)
Planning for Cosmos began in November 2010, when Villareal—along with the project architect, Walter Smith, and donors Lisa and Richard Baker—worked with Johnson Museum staff to determine the optimal location for the installation. The ceiling of the Sherry and Joel Mallin Sculpture Court was chosen for its high visibility not only on campus but also from the city of Ithaca. After studying the Museum’s architectural plans and considering structural and aesthetic aspects of the installation, the artist’s team returned to Cornell in April 2012 to install a nine-foot-square mock-up. Installation of the final piece took several weeks, with twelve thousand energy-efficient LEDs on a gridded framework attached to the ceiling of the sculpture court. A zero gravity bench was designed by the artist for viewers to fully immerse themselves in the viewing experience and to foster a more communal involvement with his installation.
Villareal’s works reinterpret fundamental components of such twentieth-century art movements as pop, minimalism, conceptual, and post-painterly abstraction while responding to the ingenuity and imagination that defines technology in the twenty-first century. Among his most notable site-specific works are the illumination of the exterior of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (2006), Multiverse in the Concourse walkway between the East and West Buildings at the National Gallery of Art (2008), and Sky at the Tampa Museum of Art (2009). Villareal recently completed a Metropolitan Transportation Authority commission in the Bleecker Street/Lafayette Street subway station in Manhattan. His largest installation to date will be The Bay Lights, illuminating the West Span of the San Francisco Bay Bridge for its 75th anniversary beginning in 2013. – Andrea Inselmann Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art – www.museum.cornell.edu