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August 6, 2025

CLARK ART INSTITUTE PRESENTS FREE DISCUSSION ON GROUND/WORK 2025 ARTIST JAVIER SENOSIAIN’S SCULPTURE, COATA III

On August 30, a Clark educator leads a close examination and in-depth discussion around the outdoor sculpture Coata III by Mexican architect Javier Senosiain. The artist, the leading proponent of organic architecture in Mexico, creates animate structures of polychrome glass mosaic, rooted in Mesoamerican mythology but exemplifying the power of pure imagination. Senosiain's serpentine sculpture dips in and out of Schow Pond like a giant water snake.

Ground/work 2025 is a year-long exhibition of monumental sculpture featuring specially commissioned works located across the Clark’s campus. Through the work of six international artists, the exhibition explores global conceptions of craft, defined as the physical process by which artists transform the world around them. Each of the participating artists exemplifies how artisanal traditions can be reinvented to generate contemporary form and meaning. The Ground/work 2025 artists are: Yō Akiyama (Japan), Laura Ellen Bacon (United Kingdom), Aboubakar Fofana (Mali), Hugh Hayden (United States), Milena Naef (Germany), and Javier Senosiain (Mexico).

Ground/work 2025 is organized by the Clark Art Institute and curated by independent scholar Glenn Adamson.

Ground/work 2025 is made possible by Denise Littlefield Sobel. Major funding is provided by the Edward and Maureen Fennessy Bousa Fund for Contemporary Projects, Karen and Robert Scott, and VIA Art Fund, with additional support from Thomas and Lily Beischer, Girlfriend Fund, and Agnes Gund.

Free. Requires a moderate hike on uneven and occasionally steep terrain. Held rain or shine; extreme weather cancels the event. For more information and individual meeting sites, visit clarkart.edu/events.