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The Art of Craft:
Contemporary Works from the Saxe Collection
 |
|
A Hollow
Jesture,1971
Robert
Arneson Glazed earthenware |
|
Teapot, 1973
Robert
Hudson Porcelain |
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Still Life, 1997
Flora C. Mace and Joey Kirkpatrick
Blown glass, alderwood. |
While contemporary American painting seems rather mired down in
recent years, in a directionless, fragmented period more market oriented than
aesthetically productive, the world of contemporary crafts, in contrast, is flourishing
with master artists growing, exploring, and, with unprecedented productivity, turning out
works of breathtaking beauty and inventiveness.
Harry Parker,
director of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, observes that in most cultures over
the course of history no distinction was made, as is done in the West today, pigeonholing
craft as functional, art as not. The implication that nonfunctional art has some inherent
aesthetic or intellectual superiority over "craft" is a matter of
misguided values that simply deprives its adherents of the greater pleasures of openness
to a wider range of artistic expression.
In a superb
exhibition, the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum is displaying over 200 works from the more
than 600 piece crafts collection of George and Dorothy Saxe, influential collectors for
two decades who have now promised their collection to the de Young as a bequest, an
acquisition which instantly places the Fine Arts Museums into the front ranks of
contemporary crafts repositories.
The irony in viewing
the exhibit is that there is nearly nothing of a functional nature to be seen - not that
its functional nature as a lamp would make Dan Dailey's witty multimedia Rope Dancer, featured
on the exhibition poster, any less a work of art for the light glowing through its blown
glass headpiece.
The Saxes started
out collecting glass and one senses from the works on view here that, even as they
diversified into other media, their first love remained their greatest. The range of
technique that is represented - the extraordinary technical virtuosity that is
displayed in these works - is astonishing. Glass is free blown, mold-blown, cast, sand
cast, anodized, laminated, assembled, fused, leaded, painted. There is float glass, páte
de verre, sheet glass; there is glass combined with different metals, wood, clay, twigs,
something called Vitrolite (absent from the Random House unabridged - but see note below)
and even (why not?) Fiestaware.
The second room of
the exhibition is darkened, with recessed spotlighting of the works in glass making them
glow as if from within and turning the entire room into an outsized jewelbox. One is
immediately struck by the monumental scale of some of these pieces. That bowl of fruit in
the photograph to the left is six feet in diameter and sits on the floor, as if waiting to
appease the appetite of some Brobdingnagian gastronome. William Morris' Suspended
Artifact and Scanga and Chihuly's Rover's Garden Grows are also works of a
scale and complexity that make one think anew about the vast potentialities of glass as a
medium.
Utterly different,
but surely part of a tradition as old as the Greeks, is Mari Meszáros' elegant and
subtle Bad Girls Go to Heaven. Nicolas Africano's Woman Eating Fruit is a
handsome, rather conventional figurative representation which is transfigured into the
exceptional by its cast glass medium; it seems to radiate incandescence from its core.
All of these riches and we haven't talked about the works in other
materials: the important deconstructed clay vessels of Peter Voulkos, a pivotal figure in
the development of sculptural ceramics; the biting satire of Robert Arneson's ceramic
portraits; the complex fiber works of Lia Cook and Olga de Amaral.
Fittingly, there is a powerful bronze construction by Richard Deutsch
hanging on the wall near the end of the exhibit. It elicits a first reaction: "But
that's sculpture. What is it doing in this show?" How brainwashed we've been by
foolish and arbitrary distinctions! When categorization clouds the ability to see
important connections, in favor of perpetuating meaningless perceptual differences, it is
time to discard the categories and clear the vision. Great art/craft helps us to see
freshly. The Art of Craft accomplishes that as well.
Thanks are due to the Saxes for the perspicacity and taste of their
collecting and the generosity with which they now share it.
- Arthur Lazere
Note: A reader has informed us that
Vitrolite is a trade mark for "glass material that was heavily used architecturally
in the 30's perhaps into the 50's......drug store fronts and the like. It is solid
colored, usually in pastels. So far as I know, it is not being manufactured any more;
glass artists who use it (notably William Carlson) are always on the lookout to salvage
some."
(Thanks to Jon C. Liebman, Art
Alliance for Contemporary Glass)
San
Francisco: M.H. de Young Memorial Museum June 26 -
October 17, 1999
The catalogue from the exhibit: The
Art of Craft
(1999), Fine Arts Museums of San
Francisco, Timothy Anglin Burgard
Also of interest:
Contemporary
Crafts: the Sourcebook of Craft Artists
Breaking
Barriers: Recent American Craft