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Morris Gallery of the Pennsylvania Academy Exhibition
June 28 - August 11, 1991
The Fabric Workshop Exhibition
June 28 - September 28, 1991
Judy Pfaff
New Work
Like most of the artists who are invited to create new work at
The Fabric Workshop, sculptor Judy Pfaff had never before
worked with cloth. Prompted by the need to develop a Workshop project,
she began to reflect about fabric's inherent nature and its visual
definition as a woven structure. An inventive spirit for whom found
objects exert a strong influence on the forms she constructs, Pfaff
was stimulated by a Mexican woven wire egg carrier that was in her
possession. With this form triggering new possibilities in her mind
and goaded by the exigencies of an upcoming exhibition, she launched
an entirely new direction in her art.
The process began with research and development. Working with The
Fabric Workshop staff, Pfaff first explored the manufacture of domestic
objects that normally require cloth; for example awnings, mattresses,
and lamp shades. She played with the shade armatures, as if she
were executing "cat's cradle", creating multiple new shapes
by bending the metal . Anything hat held fabric taut was fair game.
Umbrellas were scrutinized. She investigated woven scouring pads
and "deconstructed" them into knitted copper and stainless
steel fabric. Taking visual cues from the round egg carrier, Pfaff
directed Workshop staffers Sue Patterson and Cynthia Porter to weave
wire into a variety of circular and tubal shapes. In her resulting
sculptures Pfaff, a master alchemist, transformed these diverse
sources drawn from laborious handwork and modern technology into
unified, dynamic constructions.
When I was in college, one of the elementary math classes was dubbed
"geometry for poets." Some of Pfaff's new work is imbued
with the spirit of "poetic geometry." She sets up formal
patterns and then softens or alters them where we least expect it
-- a chair for example may have three "normal" legs and
one ringer, a long, gawky tentacle that upends our visual complacency
about what a chair looks like. In other pieces a highly complex
rhythm of forms puns on shapes from one medium to another. She eggs
on our eyes for example, to flit from the eccentric saucer of a
flattened trash can cover, to a handblown glass bubble, to a skeletal
umbrella, to delicately woven wire balls. The core of another work
that is suspended from the ceiling consists of mops of tangled bedspring
curls from which dangle a few tight ringlets.
In Pfaff's description "galactic," this new work is coloristically
sotto voce in comparison to the sassy hues of earlier pieces. For
example she now exploits the unadorned surfaces of glistening industrial
ductwork, or the naturally variegated coloration of tin cans and
containers. The Fabric Workshop installation has several works en
grisaille, the metallic grays and blacks introducing a darker note
of both form and content. One piece uses artfully patinated rust
played off against the close tones of shiny copper wire. The handwoven
components allow us to peer through them to other parts of the sculpture
and to focus on their own structure.
Because Pfaff's work is large in proportion to the low ceilings
and narrow dimensions of the rooms at The Fabric Workshop, the sculpture
installation here seems more like an environment to be entered.
The sensation of being engulfed by the art is less pronounced at
the Academy, where the viewer encounters Pfaff's work after traversing
a succession of grandly scaled, art-filled galleries. But here the
decorative elements of Furness's architecture create an exciting
foil for the play of patterns in Pfaff's sculpture. The installation
at the Academy extends the permutations of the elements visible
at The Fabric Workshop. For example, the focus of one work is an
undulating wooden configuration of stylized petals, roughly brushed
with copper leaf. In general, color plays a more active role in
the sculpture on view at the Academy. Accents of hue include thin
washes of blue, green, or orange on a variety of tin containers,
tinted glass discs, and colored globes fabricated of woven wire
or welded circles.
Pfaff sometimes speaks of her work as "splicing" images,
as she seamlessly joins recognizable practical objects with abstract
forms. But let the viewer beware -- the artist enjoys fabricating
elements that mimic familiar, generic objects. By her account
95% of each sculpture represents elements she has created, and only
5% accounts for bits she has found readymade. Yet these objects
are very important and, in her words, "start the ball rolling"
for her creative process.
The artist views the manipulated wire forms woven on her instructions
by The Fabric Workshop staff as an "anti-welding"
element in her work. The sedentary and repetitious processes of
sewing, weaving and knitting are new to her sculpture yet deeply
familiar to the artist. Her grandmother was a seamstress in post-war
London and Pfaff recalls that as a child she would curl up under
the treadles of several big sewing machines. While the visual thinking
that led to the body of work on view at The Fabric Workshop and
the Pennsylvania Academy may have been triggered by the Workshop
process, at heart it springs from her earliest memories of creative
enterprise.
Judith Stein, Curator
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
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