26x28x50 - The Mount
Transcription
26x28x50 - The Mount
26x28x50 26 artists, 28 sculptures, 50 acres June 1-October 31, 2015 1. BERNARD KLEVICKAS, UNTITLED (RED ASSEMBLY) stainless steel, aluminum, pigment; $20,000 2. BERNARD ZUBROWSKI, THE LONG GOODBYE plastic, metal; $3,500 3. CHRIS PLAISTED, JACK IS AN OPTIMIST steel, copper, aluminum; $15,000 4. BILL JACKSON, CYLINDER DIHEDRAL #1 steel; $15,000 5. GENE FLORES, EYRIE VII stainless steel, bronze; $40,000 6. STEPHEN KLEMA, HOBBES’ CLAW #2 wood, metal, plastic; $6,500 7. GARY ORLINSKY, NABIGOS wood, burlap, PVC; $1,800 8. EVAN MORSE, RHYTON II marble, rope; $7,700 9. PETER BARRETT, SEGMENT FIGURE IV: CRUCIFORM steel; $24,000 10. WILLIAM CARLSON, COGNITO wood; $6,000 11. ANTOINETTE SCHULTZE, MOTHER TOTEM granite, glass; $25,000 12. LUCY HODGSON, PUT A LID ON IT concrete, steel, wire mesh, animal skull; $10,000 LUCY HODGSON, HYDRA-HEADED-HYDROFRACKER concrete, steel, wire mesh, animal skull; $10,000 LUCY HODGSON, THERE’S NO OIL UNDER KABUL concrete, steel, wire mesh, animal skull; $8,000 13. ANN JON, ELASTIC LIMIT copper, netting, wood, pigment; $8,000 14. LEON SMITH, TRIUMPH aluminum; $20,000 15. PETER DELLERT, S-WHORL plastic, wood; $4,900 16. ELLEN WATSON, GREEN MEN polyester resin, fiberglass, wool; POR 17. ROBIN TOST, CHINESE COINS mixed metals; $5,000 18. FIELDING BROWN, BICYCLE WRECK laminated wood, aluminum; $4,000 19. FAY CHIN, INTERIOR EXTERIOR aluminum; $18,000 20. SUSAN FLORES, BORROWED SCENERY wood, steel, pigment, paper; POR 21. TAYLOR APOSTOL, CHANDELIER ROOM wire, steel, marble; $4,200 22. JOHN WILKINSON, RESIDENCE cement, steel mesh, fiberglass; $3,700 23. PHILIP MARSHALL, METRO steel, pigment; $12,000 24. MT. EVERETT HIGH SCHOOL, REMINISCENCE mixed media; $2,000 25. SUSAN ROWLEY, STRONGARMED #3 aluminum, pigment; $5,200 26. SARAH HAVILAND, APPARITION steel, galvanized mesh; $4,500 21 22 18 20 19 17 23 16 24 15 25 14 26 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 5 6 4 1 3 2 Sculptures are for sale. For information and sales please contact: Ann Jon, Executive Director, SculptureNow: 413.623.2068 • annjon@bcn.net • www.sculpturenow.org This exhibition and the SculptureNow student tours and workshops are supported by private donors, businesses, corporations, family funds and foundations including: Massachusetts Cultural Council through Local Cultural Councils of Alford-Egremont; Monterey; New Marlborough; Otis; Sandisfield; Sheffield; & Stockbridge; Berkshire Bank; Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation: A.R.T. Fund and Lee Educational Enrichment Fund; Black Rock Foundation; Greylock Federal Credit Union; Hickey Family Fund; Price Chopper’s Golub Foundation; William & Barbara Saltzman Charitable Foundation; Savanna Fund; The Schwab Charitable Fund; The Jane & Martin Schwartz Family Foundation; Marion & Leonard Simon Fund & Turkeybush Fund. Major Supporters: Anonymous (2); Lila Berle; Peter & Incy Brooks; Harold Grinspoon; Peter & Ann Herbst; Lucy Holland & Charles Schulze; Petra Krauledat and Peter Hansen; Elizabeth and Robert McGraw; Kevin & Rosemary McNeely; Nora McNeely and Michael Hurley; Jane Murdock; David Ricci; Joyce Scheffey; Diane Troderman & Allen Williams. Please support our Art & Educational programs by sending your tax-deductible donation to SculptureNow, POB 600, Becket, MA 01223. For information, sales and donations please contact Ann Jon, Executive Director, SculptureNow, 413 623 2068, annjon@bcn.net, www.sculpturenow.org TAYLOR APOSTOL, CHANDELIER ROOM Inspired by simplified bodily lines, creases and protrusions, Chandelier Room evokes hair surrounding a head and creating a veil. The circular room creates a veiled space, a sense of privacy that is easily pushed aside. Carved marble step stones lead to the space inviting the viewer to enter, reflect and touch the swaying ropes. PETER BARRETT, SEGMENT FIGURE IV: CRUCIFORM My work explores the plastic quality inherent in steel. The heavy structural segments are meant to convey levity, provide delicate shadows and subtle negative spaces, and, perhaps, even a sense of weightless balance. FIELDING BROWN, BICYCLE WRECK Bicycle Wreck abstractly conveys a two-wheel bicycle disaster. Two distorted rims meet at right angles and join in a single, continuous curve. The rims are laminated wood and aluminum; aluminized string represents the spokes. It is mounted on a ball bearing and rotates in the wind. WILLIAM CARLSON, COGNITO This show allows artists to draw from the environment and negotiate their vision with the forest’s splendor. I chose sculptures “grown” in my studio that contrast and compliment the setting. I assembled the wood forms intuitively, creating shapes that are abstract and unfamiliar. For me this was a leap in a new and different direction. Their woodland location offers an awkward, juxtaposed visual relationship to nature. FAY CHIN, INTERIOR EXTERIOR Environmental installations prompt new experiences of perception. My larger-than-life works alter the normal experience of viewing by inviting walking through, around, and into the sculptural space. The actual location and surrounding environment directly influence my art and are often its source and inspiration. PETER DELLERT, S-WHORL S-Whorl began as a series of three dimensional paper constructions, studies in form and texture inspired by my interest in minimalism. Here the scale is increased tenfold while using nature itself as the background. I like the juxtaposition of the rigidly designed manmade materials against the landscape’s gentle curves and soft textures. GENE FLORES, EYRIE VII My Eyrie Series I - VII pieces are inspired by the many bird nests and nestlings in the woods and fields surrounding my home. I have worked on this series for about five years in different scales. The bronze element defines the separation between column (tree trunk) and eyrie (nest), and the arms represent the flittering parents. A meditation on the day. SUSAN FLORES, BORROWED SCENERY I am interested in a deep sense of place, including the emotional. The structure’s design refers to Edith Wharton’s The Decoration of Houses and frames a view at The Mount. Within is a shelf for small paper books which I have made. Viewers can also add their own stories of this place. SARAH HAVILAND, APPARITION Apparition presents a mythical human-bird hybrid in potential flight. It exists in multiple realms, neither bird nor human, gargoyle nor angel. Perched on high, the semi-transparent figure may recall a ghost in the air, an individual in formation, or a being with uncertain destiny. Its simple shape suggests the limits of the real and call of the ethereal, echoing many avian beings related to the soul. LUCY HODGSON, PUT A LID ON IT, HYDRA-HEADEDHYDROAFRACKER & THERE’S NO OIL UNDER KABUL My work addresses the idiocy with which we are destroying our natural environment with toxic waste. An industrial wasteland of brutalist structures is rapidly replacing valuable arable land and sacrosanct wilderness. The pieces represent the processing plants/conversion systems comprising the fossil fuel industry, the tentacles of political intrigue, and the futility of military invasion. BILL JACKSON, CYLINDER DIHEDRAL #1 This sculpture’s two long components allude to wing design. The up-angled arcs and the corresponding downreactions mirror each other and the cylinders act like wedges, holding these components in a state of tension. The central frame reacts against the “up/ down” forces of the cylinders. The horizontal elements respond by bending; the resulting captive arcs are visible from nearly every angle. ANN JON, ELASTIC LIMIT How do textiles and the human mind go through strain and stretch, enriched and expanded to new forms and thoughts without breakage, to new equilibriums, pausing, then passing beyond the yield point, the elastic limit, beyond which small increases in force give big increases in length and depth? STEPHEN KLEMA, HOBBES’ CLAW #2 My work uses overlapping and interlocking stained and painted wood elements to create images that visually reduce a complex form into simpler, more definable shapes which, together, yield a coherent figurative form. The imagery comes from worldly items—an animal, a raindrop, a tool. The form is influenced by the unique properties of the materials I choose—how they can be bent, cut, and shaped. BERNARD KLEVICKAS, UNTITLED (RED ASSEMBLY) My piece explores the transformation of a flat plane into a curved surface. The panels are identical in shape and size, configured to create an undulating pattern of concave and convex forms. The tiles are suspended by a tree-like network of pipes, with one tile resting at the base as if fallen like a leaf from a tree. The sculpture allows me to delve into spatial qualities of surface devoid of volume through waveform shapes. PHILIP MARSHALL, METRO This installation is part of a larger project prompted by my experiences in London, Tokyo, and Jakarta. It explores the loss of individuality in the seething masses of a great metropolis. It is inspired by the rush-hour foot traffic and my impression that individuals, although often appearing visually similar, remain isolated as they purposefully make their separate, but intersecting, ways to work. EVAN MORSE, RHYTON II My work explores simple geometries and the interplay of physical forces. It creates tension among the trees by suspending a stone funnel between them, inviting awareness of the trunks’ scale and the space in between. Rhyton means a ceremonial drinking vessel; the work is inspired by the idea of rainwater being ceremoniously channeled to the earth. MT. EVERETT HIGH SCHOOL, REMINISCENCE Can we keep our childhoods with us, or must we leave them behind? Are those children still with us, or lost under life’s accumulation? What is this progression from childhood to adulthood, play to work, hopes to expectations? The ability to change, to move forward through reflection, lies within. It begins with keeping memories of our pasts alive. Walk backward within the spiral, looking through the layers to what is escaping, hiding, or waiting. GARY ORLINSKY, NABIGOS These simple, elegant sculptures juxtapose the pure geometry of the sphere with the gestural movement of the saplings. The negative space of these skeletal forms becomes a dominant motif. Nabigos is a variety of dark red cherries. CHRIS PLAISTED, JACK IS AN OPTIMIST This began as a dark piece. Gnarly black roots that you could climb above to a brighter place. It focuses on the contrast of man vs. nature, or even vs. his emotional self, using different materials, with nature as an added element. I hope the weather will intensify the various properties, spin the clouds, reflect off the globe, drip with rain, to produce a more dynamic piece. SUSAN ROWLEY, STRONGARMED #3 A linear structure outlines a perforated white geometric. The rectangle is light, floating, and precariously leaning, almost ready to fall. Two legs elevate its bottom edge, and the curved “arm” stops it from collapse. The paradox is the airy appearance vs. the box’s scale. Will it float or will it fall? The illusion intensifies as you look through the perforations to the surrounding environment. ANTOINETTE SCHULTZE, MOTHER TOTEM My work stands as a symbol of a mother’s power, your mother’s, my mother’s, mother earth’s. The three center pieces of black granite gently enfold inward revealing a silent and empty opening filled with possibility. The wrapping soft folds forming the sculpture’s shape are like rose bud petals. The white granite top of the totem sparkles in the sun and the golden glass evokes the spiritual, the heart of life. LEON SMITH, TRIUMPH Triumph is, for me, a geometric musical canon. In it I folded, cut, and arranged the segments or chords so that they gradually increase in size to elicit a feeling of growth and elation. ROBIN TOST, CHINESE COINS My work is a traditional quilt pattern fabricated by alternating long strips of solid color with strips of multicolored pieced blocks. It evokes winter light in a birch grove. In "Ethan Frome", Edith Wharton wrote of constant leaden skies over a grimly austere landscape. Sometimes a limpid winter light, like no other, breaks through the gloom. ELLEN WATSON, GREEN MEN My inspiration comes from the natural world, mythology, and literature. A recurring motif is the “Green Man” imagery that combines foliage and human figures. Found in many ancient cultures, it often references rebirth, transition, and metamorphosis. I weave all these influences with my own autobiographical references to create work that is about “walking between worlds”. JOHN WILKINSON, RESIDENCE Figures have long been part of my sculptures. They used to be single and often on wheeled structures to show them moving through space. Lately, the figures have become groups, and my attention is on the spaces and shapes in-between. Inspired by The Mount’s country-house setting, the figures in Residence are in a building or tower with the top figures possibly evoking the maintenance crew. BERNARD ZUBROWSKI, THE LONG GOODBYE My outdoor pieces are composed of multiple similar parts. When moved by the wind, the changing juxtapositions create interesting kinesthetic patterns. Most of my pieces do not rotate but rather oscillate around a pivot point. My pieces are sensitive to very light air movements but can withstand stronger bursts. I observe them over long periods to see how they stand up under varying wind conditions.