Survival: When you expect fair play…
Jenny Holzer (1950—)
Created 1984
Installed 2022
Text on cast aluminum plaque, edition of 10, 5.88 x 10”
Located in the South entryway, Regenstein Library, 57th Street
Gift of the Artist
Two bronze plaques bolted inconspicuously on plain interior walls of University of Chicago buildings escape notice. Unremarkable amid an expanse of institutional markers—named buildings, named departments, named rooms—the plaques are yet another ornamental declaration of authority. The average passerby could not be faulted for passing them by. And yet, a student looks up to read an inscribed text. There’s the rift. The metal plates, emblazoned with acerbic observations on the human condition, are public artworks by Conceptual artist Jenny Holzer. Installed in University buildings, they undermine the casual observer’s expectations. Visually akin to plates across campus that broadcast private donations, commemorate significant events, and memorialize people of import, both remembered and forgotten, Holzer’s plaques act as unobtrusive channels for distributing unsettling texts. Designed to rouse and confound, their siting in the hallowed halls of higher education echoes the erudite environment of the University of Chicago while calling attention to apparatuses of privilege and power.
Known for her incisive text-based interventions in the public sphere, Holzer produces timely and insightful works through a variety of media, spanning sculpture, painting, new media, and installation. Whether printed on paper, projected on a wall, or lit-up in LED lights, Holzer’s work always begins with text—the execution follows. Inspired by exposure to critical readings while enrolled in the Whitney’s Independent Study Program from 1976-1977, Holzer first began to author and disperse short texts, such as her Truisms (1977-79) and Inflammatory Essays (1979-82) in the late seventies. Cheaply printed and feloniously plastered across New York City streets, these writings constituted Holzer’s first interventions in public space. She continued to explore new tones of voice and new modes of execution in the early eighties. Notably, two bodies of work, “Living” and “Survival”, encompassing bronze plaques, carved stone benches, and enamel painted signs, marked a departure from the ephemeral works on paper. In “Living” and “Survival”, Holzer created permanent objects that dissuaded easy public interventions. Her past texts rendered in a signature affectless all-caps elicited a loud and powerful voice, but these works command authority through their materials as much as their words. Constructed from valuable and substantial media such as metal and stone, the material support accredits the weight and force of the inscribed texts.