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Monday, May 30, 2011

Sculpture and Louie Schwartzberg

Time for some beauty.

Louie Schwartzberg is a fimmaker. I love how his work has both opened his eyes and his heart.
He has both the latest technology and the patience of stone.

The images of the bats at night are amazing. While you watch this film, think about how Schwartzberg had to understand both space and time to position the camera to catch the animals, the plants and the moon. (All moving constantly.)

Cactus flowers only last one night so the set up had to change depending on what might occur.  In order to capture all this, remind yourself of all the filming that didn't work, the set up was off, the animals went to a different flower. Schwartzberg's work a dance of planning and improvisation


Schwartzberg's website is Blacklight Films
Watch more

Friday, May 27, 2011

Sculpture and the Foot

How do you repair a shattered calcaneus (your heel bone) ?
Very carefully.
These X-rays deserve a labeling of Architectural Sculpture of the highest level.

The surgery that will enable B. to walk again seems to be an exquisite combination of fine jewelry making and a box of drywall screws. 

 

Think about how the surgeon had to spatially understand that calcaneus bone.

He knew it intimately in it's shattered fragments and kept in mind how to reassemble them back into a functional bone. He had to plan the screw placement to use just the right number of them and place each one so that none of them ran into another. Add to that performance the element of a ticking clock,  a suffering patient, and a very small working area.


That's all in a day's work for the good doctor who probably doesn't think of his work as sculpture.
I do.




Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Sculpture and the Gallery Without Walls

My relief sculptures, The Four Seasons of Love, are is in a book!

It is so nice when a gallery goes above and beyond what is expected to promote their artists's work.

The Four Seasons of Love are on page 7

The Arts Council of Lake Oswego's program Gallery Without Walls is going into new territory creating a cell phone application that guides you through the exhibition with maps and information about this year's sculpture.
They've also published a book and CD of the show that is available on Blurb.com.
Click here to see the book

Bravo and Thank You to the photographer Deb Holister and all the volunteers at the Arts Council of Lake Oswego.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Sculpture and Indians

What could come after sculpture and feminism?

Sculpture and Indians.

Being a bronze Indian is hard work.

I had my "Bouquet for the City" sculpture at the Heathman Lodge for the American Rhododendron Society Convention. Walking back and forth from the parking lot I kept passing this lost soul.

(Background: The Heathman Lodge looks like a giant log cabin. Very "Western" looking.)

The bronze figure is well modeled, the siting is perfunctory. It's right near a noisy heating / cooling unit. I looked for a signature or a title but was unable to find one. Perhaps that's for the best.....

What does this figure represent?

A "western experience"? .....in a hotel parking lot?

The Homeless is more like it. The white folk go inside while he stays outside in the rain.
I know a statue is inert matter, but its creation and intent are spirit and ideas, and those are very much alive.



The hotel vans idle, filling the area with exhaust.

While I love figurative work, I find most figurative bronze incredibly depressing. While the modeling may be skilled, there seems to be no thought behind the work.  

Art has the power to speak to us, to move us. Isn't it a pity when the content is empty cliche and status quo?
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Wildlife is a valid sculpture genre.


Does this Indian fall into that category?
(Ducks and Bucks, Stags on craigs,
and a Noble Savage or two on the mantle or in the parking lot?


Is this Indian statue the corporate equivalent of a lawn jockey?


Is there a curse worse than to be romanticised?
Even in the art-afterlife this Indian has no real estate

Ignored by the hotel vans and guests, 
his prayers fall on deaf ears. 
"Oh Great Spirit, Deliver me from this waste-land!"


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I don't have any answers, but I do have questions:

What do you think of artists appropriating First Nation/ethnic imagery?

Having marginalized aboriginal peoples, why do we value their images and art, especially if they didn't make that art?

Your Thoughts?


Friday, May 20, 2011

Sculpture and Feminism

Dominique Strauss-Kahn
How does the recent behavior of Dominique Strauss-Kahn relate to sculpture, and how does sculpture relate to feminism? 

Sculpture has always been one of the macho arts. When I was in school, women weren't even allowed on the foundry crew. Too difficult for the "little ladies." (That was changed by a group of determined women sculptors who proved they could do the work.)

What hasn't changed much is the genre of female nudes... aka Bronze Barbies. Guy's love to make them.

It's always the hot babe. 

My dislike of this genre stems from the fact that rarely do the Bronze Barbies portray an individual woman. (Obsession I can understand. Look at the work of Gaston Lachaise. )

The sculpture I'm talking about idealizes features to the point of being generic. It's pretty and it sells.
The breasts are always perfectly pert or gravity defying DDD's. Women know that breasts come in a myriad of shapes and sizes. Don't male sculptors know this? Why do the bronze breasts and bodies all look alike?

The Bronze Barbies never portray any of the stages of a woman's life. (Barbie is over 50!)
Spend some time with 'Celle qui fut la belle heaulmière' (the Helmet maker's once beautiful wife) to see what Rodin could do with an older model. The sculpture isn't pretty. It's life. It's Art.

Writer Isabel Allende speaks passionately for women and Feminism in this TED video.

"What I fear most is Power with impunity. I fear abuse of power and the power to abuse."



Images of "sexy" women bought and sold are so woven into our global culture, so pervasive that we don't really see how odd it is. The next time you see a bronze nude of a woman,  let yourself really Look and See the work. Ask youself: "How true is this sculpture?" or better "What story is this telling? ............What is this selling?"

Your response?


Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Sculpture and Ecofauna

What comes after a giant foam lion?

Big Bugs! 
Not as big as a Japanese sci-fi movie, but way too large for most folk. These sculptures are scientifically accurate reproductions of insects from around the world.
Visit Ecofauna's website to see more.
Ecofauna was created in 1996 in Italy by Lorenzo Possenti  a sculptor with Natural Sciences degree.


Real insect (bottom center) and 20 times enlarged 
Do you have a favorite insect ?

Monday, May 16, 2011

Sculpture and Parade Lions

It doesn't have to be serious to be sculpture.

I planned on a focused series on sculpture and the garden this month. Between daily visits with my fragile 87 year old mother in law, broken plumbing and damaged floors, that's not going to happen.

Instead I'm going with the flow and letting myself be surprised with the posts that do show up.
Not what you expect to see in a back yard!

Picking up the new toilet from the warehouse, I saw the king of the jungle across the street!

Peering through the gates, I couldn't stop laughing.
Why does changing the scale of something make even a foam lion magical and funny?

This is also a good example of how a great paint job makes a mediocre carving work. The bitter truth is that color trumps form every time.


Put the emphasis where it's needed most, on the face, with good color and the rest, like that big sloppy seam across the chest, is given a free pass.


Turns out this noble beast represents George Morlan Plumbing Supply in parades. 

Wouldn't it be wonderful if more companies sponsored sculpture?
A noble beast amidst the broken toilets.