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Universe of Meaning
Directions In Contemporary Sculpture
Brattleboro Museum & Art Center,
Brattleboro, VT
May 13 - November 4, 1995
What is art about? To answer this I try to identify the obvious subject of a work and then ask myself about the ideas behind it. For example, TIMOTHY WOODMAN'S subject in Waterskiing seems to be the exhilarating speed of a leisure-time activity. But there are issues that go beyond a simple story, which we can uncover by careful looking. Woodman creates the strong impression that the skier is about to
zoom into the distance. But the actual aluminum sculpture is very
thin. How does the artist convey a sense of deep space? He makes
the motorboat much smaller than the figure, and he angles the watery
path to converge on the boat. These tricks of perspective were developed
five hundred years ago. Woodman revitalizes a traditional technique
using contemporary subjects and materials.
PAUL SHORE fashions images of the head to "stand in” for the full human figure. Combining them with invented shapes, he builds delicate forms that resemble hand-held rattles. One of his materials is plaster, which reminds me of bones. Shore intends us to see these evocative forms as part tool, part weapon, and part toy. Have you ever wondered what four-legged might serve as a surrogate
for you? As an artist, NINA YANKOWITZ gives herself the task of
imagining on our behalf In Compressed Block, four-legged
creatures balance precariously on one another's backs in a higgledy-piggledy
tower. This menagerie represents a variety of ways of being: pampered
(like clipped poodles), domesticated, and wild. Some perform for
us with such props as balls and rings. Others dangle leashes or
reins. Like the dog in a Muppet movie, who said he had "a new
leash on life," these beguiling animals are both free and captive. Can clothing become sculpture? Is a well-made garment a work of
art? Although I might admire a designer dress for its material,
design, and construction, I don't usually spend time thinking about
its ability to convey ideas. Whereas we might speak casually of
the 'fine art of dressmaking," a dress and a piece
of sculpture are usually two different things. But BEVERLY SEMMES
uses the shape, fabric, and style of clothes to create wall hangings
on a monumental scale. What do her garments tell us about the human experience? Images
of unpeopled apparel make use of the fact that all clothing is encoded
with information -- about gender, class, race, history, and values,
to name a few examples. Winterweight mohair is the material that
Semmes chose for Yellow Gown. Would you expect a gown to
be made of mohair? Did Semmes represent a nightgown or an evening
gown? Who might choose to wear a garment with long sleeves, "Peter
Pan" collar, and a gathered bodice? As with any successful
work of art, there is not just one way to understand its meaning.
The old riddle asks, "When is a door not a door?" The answer, is "When it is ajar." In Button Wall, sculptor NANcy A. BLUM seems to ask, "When is a button not a fastener?" to which she answers, "When it becomes an object of contemplation." Working with porcelain and stoneware, Blum alters the size and material of buttons and represents them as wall plaques the size ofdinner plates. Like Semmes, she is interested in simple, everyday forms and the new meanings that accompany changes in scale. As your eyes scan Blum's assembly, what similarities and differences do you see among the forms? Each plaque conveys unique information about its purpose and about the history of style.
Semmes and Blum appropriated the forms of mundane objects. What happens when a sculptor commandeers the things themselves? Does a change of context impart a new significance? LISA HOKE has
given much thought to her use of such materials as buttons, zippers,
thread, and jars: I am witnessing, reliving, and recording the activities
of every day, attempting to extend the moment. I seek, in the singular
object, to linger over that which is outgrown or too personal or
too ordinary. Sometimes in the mundane is the opportunity for me
to examine a fragment of an experience, which then becomes a building
block or catalyst towards a new structure. Each object is rich with
underrated potential.... It is the smallness that I want to celebrate
and, elaborate." In Eavesdropper, Hoke bedecks a brass horn with a multitude
of button leis. How does the title help us to get at the meaning?
To me, there are several possibilities. The title may refer to the
process of the artist, who, like an eavesdropper communicates information
gathered covertly. Or it may refer to the piece itself, which might
be seen as a funnel attracting the energy in the room. Or it may
make reference to our role as viewers, the unobserved observers
who look and listen. When I look at the weighty button garlands
slumped against the floor, I think about the myriad necklaces worn
by women in some non-Western cultures.
Can you conceive of a portrait without a face? Portraits are usually understood to be representations of the heads of specific individuals. But Georgia-based artist BEVERLY BUCHANAN makes portraits by building small dwellings. About these she has said: "I'm interested in their shapes and how they're made and how they reflect the people who built them. I consider my shacks portraits. It's the spirit that comes through the forms." Buchanan's portraits depict a homemade architecture that speaks clearly
of the improvisational skills of their southern makers, impoverished
in means but not in resourcefulness. Buchanan shrinks down the size
of the originals to the proportions of a dollhouse. Small cutouts
of women inhabit the magpie-like assortment of materials in A
Castle for Queens. What does the spare and dignified construction
of Bob's Shack tell us about Bob's personality?
Sometimes Buchanan conveys her interest in real people's experiences by other means than images of shelter. Estate Sale, Yard Sale is a poignant combination of small figures, handwritten signs, and real objects. In an accompanying story, the artist uses words to set the stage: "When somebody bought the salt shaker, that was the last straw. It was his daddy's favorite. Everyone in the house, got laid off from jobs at the same time. A favorite purse had been the only one, even for Sunday. A bicycle chain, medicine bottles, and milk bottle. It all seemed too much to watch. Hands raised in a shout to heaven, the women could barely watch when the rolling pin was sold. No more biscuits, here." ALLAN WEXLER wants us to know that he spent a lot of time making
his sculpture. His elegant, detailed, and finely wrought house forms
duplicate the scale and look of architectural models. Trained in
both art and architecture, Wexler often uses the forms of such useful
things as tables and chairs as the starting point for his sculpture.
Recently he became interested in how people consume and dispose
of water and the challenges of water collection. He approached this serious subject with a sense of humor. His quixotic
solutions to drought are seen in Building for Water Collection
with Buckets and Building for Water Collection
with Troughs. Other playful responses seem tailored
to answer the question, "What can one person do?" Remember
the film clip of Gene Kelly splashing around crooning "Singin'
in the Rain"? To me, Wexler's maquette Hat for Bottled
Rain Water would make a wonderful device to retrofit the dancer
as a one-person water collection system. Many Americans have visited the thirteen-year old Vietnam Veterans
Memorial in Washington, DC, but few know the name of its designer,
MAYA LIN. For the Memorial, she cut into a grassy knoll with a stone
walkway that gradually takes the viewer below ground level. Combinations
of natural and human-made elements have continued to be important
components in Lin's sculpture. In Pilchuck Landscape she
uses stones as both tools and materials. The word "pilchuck"
is a Salish Indian term for "raging red river in which salmon
run upstream to spawn." Lin created the sculpture during a recent residency at Seattle's
Pilchuck Glass School. Placing one rock beneath a piece of malleable
lead, she wielded another as a hammer, pounding the metal until
it bore the stone's imprint. If you look underneath the glass shelf,
you'll discover the hidden model. Sometimes it's useful to state the obvious. A piece of sculpture
is a three-dimensional object, a form that has height, width, and
depth. But can a three-dimensional sculpture be inspired by something
flat? HEIDE FASNACHT explores this question by using maps as her
starting point. We'd literally be lost without such representations
of our world. But for the artist, they are a ready-made vehicle
for the communion of ideas, conveying information about people as
well as geography. What's going on in Fasnacht's Lower Forty Eight? She takes
the outline of the United States but gives every state the contour
of Ohio, the artist's birthplace. Are Americans more alike than
different? Working with canvas, the artist prods us to consider
the cookie-cutter conformity of contemporary life. Great Lakes
I is another intentionally goofy geography lesson. Here Fasnacht
drapes the wall with pliable cutouts of rubber that take the shape
of America's largest inland bodies of water. The droopiness of the
shapes reminds me of other playful instances of unexpected relaxation,
such as the game in Alice in Wonderland in which flamingos
go limp when used as croquet mallets. NORMAN TUCK also likes to replace the stiff with the pliant. An artist
with a sense of humor, he may transform such simple objects as clocks
into moving sculptures. Although two wisps of embroidery thread
have replaced the rigid pendulum in Quartz Clock #2, it
still functions as a timepiece. Wag on the Wall, however,
no longer tells time. Constructed from parts of a Taiwanese cuckoo
clock, it wiggles and wags in an unclock-like fashion.
Like a magician, Tuck sometimes makes the invisible visible. The unseen force of magnetism is the "glue" in Magnetic Attraction, a spare and elegant sculpture made from a paper clip and a horseshoe magnet. Flipper is interactive. When I turn the small handle attached to the paddle, I see an engraved image of a hand turning a handle. What is the difference between life and art? All artists who use
everyday materials confront this challenging question. To me, a
magnet used to pick up pins is "life," while a magnet
used to create a line is "art." Many of the artists in
Universe of Meaning transform scavenged
objects by incorporating them in their art. JERILEA ZEMPEL bases
her sculpture on "what the world already gives us," and
considers the end result "more interesting then when I invent
shapes." She prefers to start with such found materials as
guns and cars and then alter their symbolic power by adding incongruous
materials.
For Avenging Angels, her installation at the Brattleboro Museum, Zempel began with five chain saws, which were once used by Vermonters. To degrease their surfaces, she loaded them in the back of a pickup truck and drove through an automatic car wash. In her studio, she crocheted a camouflage skin for each, choosing five different furry white or off-white yarns. When hung at just above eye level, her unusual assembly of forms looks like fragments of angel wings.
How do we know what's in outer space? Normally we rely on scientists to supply the answers. But visual artists can also help us envision the celestial realms. Can you imagine a garden in space? ANN SPERRY did, taking her cues from the large aggregate of stars, gas, and dust we call the Milky Way. Galactic Gardens consists of spheres of stainless steel, brass, copper, and aluminum, "Planted" in a bed of Vermont stone. Sperry asks us to ponder whether these patinated planets and moons have just landed, or "are they pushing up from some interior place to rest quietly-perhaps to subsume our air and presence? Or will they take flight and assume an orbit around us?"
In life, there are a universe of ways of being human and an infinity of means by which artists convey it.
JUDITH E. STEIN, PHD
Guest Curator, UNIVERSE OF MEANING
This exhibition is made possible through the
generous support of JOSEPH MARTINSON MEMORIAL FUND SAM'S DEPARTMENT
STORE, INC. THE WINDHAM FOUNDATION. All works are on loan courtesy
of the artists unless otherwise noted. Dimensions are height by
width by depth.
NANCY A. BLUM
Button Wall, 1994
porcelain, stoneware fifty-nine pieces, each 12 inches in diameter
BEVERLY BUCHANAN
A Castle for Queens, 1993
wood, mixed media 62-1/4 x 28 x 16 inches; courtesy of Steinbaum
Krauss Gallery, New York
Estate Sale, Yard Sale, 1992
mixed media 19 x 15 x 29 inches; courtesy of Steinbaum Krauss Gallery,
New York
Bob's Shack, 1990
wood, tin 17 x 13 x 10 inches; courtesy of Steinbaum Krauss Gallery,
New York Shotgun, 1992
wood, mixed media 13-3/4 x 15 x 10 inches; courtesy of Steinbaum
Krauss Gallery, New York
HEIDE FASNACHT
H. 0. M. E. S., 1992
laminated rubber, steel bolts 173 x 36 x 2-1/2 inches
Lower Forty Eight, 1992
canvas, cotton batting, water color, pencil 46 x 55 x 2 inches
Great Lakes 1, 1990
LISA HOKE
Hair's Breadth, 1994
wax, thread, spools, glue 7 x 41/2 x 4 feet; courtesy of the artist
& Horodner Romley Gallery, New York
Eavesdropper, 1994
steel, buttons, wire, horn 54 x 90 x 21 inches; courtesy of the
artist & Horodner Romley Gallery, New York
MAYA LIN
Pilchuk Landscape, 1995
glass, stones, lead 2 x 26 x 9 inches; courtesy of Peter Blum
BEVERLY SEMMES
Yellow Gown, 1992
mohair with wood and metal hanger 72 x 48 inches; collection of
Eileen and Michael Cohen
PAUL SHORE
Rattle, 1993
plaster, wood 18 x 4 1/2 x 3 1/4 inches
Rattle, 1993
plaster, wood, iron 27 x 14 x 5 inches
Rattle, 1993
plaster, wood, metal 38 x 16 x 21/2 inches
ANN SPERRY
Galactic Gardens, 1995
mild and stainless steel, brass, copper, aluminum, paint, stone,
glass, wood 17 x 8 x 8 feet
NORMAN TUCK
Flipper, 1977
mixed media 18 x 20 x 18 inches
Magnetic Attraction, 1984 (1995 reproduction)
mixed media 18 x 18 x 18 inches
Wag on the Wall, 1995
mixed media 58 x 5 inches
Quartz Clock #2, 1995
mixed media 61 x 8 inches
ALLAN WEXLER
Building for Water Collection with Buckets, 1994
wood 22 x 22 x 13 inches; courtesy of Ronald Feldman Fine Arts,
New York
Building for Water Collection with Troughs,
1994
wood 15 x 10 x 10 inches; courtesy of Ronald Feldman Fine Arts,
New York
Hat for Bottled Rain Water, 1994
hat, water bottles, wood, plastic tubes 32 x 14 x 18 inches; courtesy
of Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York
TIMOTHY WOODMAN
Waterskiing, 1993
aluminum, oil paint 25-1/2 x 23-3/4 x 9-3/4 inches; courtesy of
Zabriskie Gallery, New York
In the Surf, 1993
aluminum, oil paint 11 1/2 x 141/2 x 5 inches; courtesy of Zabriskie
Gallery, New York
NINA YANKOWITZ
The Equation of Bisecting Planes, 1995
painted wood panels, aluminum, copper, steel 50-1/2 x 63 x 36-3/4
inches
Compressed Block, 1994
aluminum, copper, steel 6-1/2 x 5 x 3-1/2 feet (approx.)
JERILEA ZEMPEL
Avenging Angels, 1995
chain saws, yarn dimensions variable
Universe of Meaning
is a production of the
Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, Mara A. Williams, director
and Judith E. Stein, PhD, guest curator. Anne Monihan was the project
director and exhibit designer. Educational programs were designed
by Linda Rubinstein, BMAC education curator, and Philip Yenawine,
consultant. Copy editing was done by Judith Bellamy. The brochure
was designed by Jeff Miller. Copyright May 1995 by the Brattleboro
Museum & Art Center.
A Season for Seeing is made
possible through a challenge grant from the Thom. Thompson
Trust. During 1995 the museum is partially funded by a
grant of $27,3 10 from the Institute for Museum Services,
a federal agency, and by a grant of $9,100 from the Vermont
Council on the Arts.
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