“I’m as interested in the way my art works is a public space as in the
art itself.”
Dale Chihuly
Dale Chihuly
From “like daily deliveries
of unwanted flowers after a regretted one-night transgression” (Sebastian Smee, Boston Globe) to “infuses
space with a different kind of quality, everything glistens and moves and
swirls. Nothing is left static” (Rachel Holmes, The
Metropolist), Dale Chihuly’s art confronts
the status quo.
The
troubled rabble rousing youth who found direction and meaning on an Israeli kibbutz and along the way fell in love with Europe’s
stained glass windows, Chihuly, built on Comfort Tiffney’s best efforts,
taking glass from the night stand to the foyer of London’s prestigious Victoria
and Albert Museum.
How his work sits within the art world is of
little concern to Chihuly, as he told the Telegraph
newspaper’s Sheryl Garratt, “I don’t even answer that, usually. Is it art or is
it craft? I say if it’s good, it’s an art. The best of everything is an art."
Chihuly’s career as a hand’s on glass blower was
cut short by a traffic accident that saw him loose the sight in his left eye along
with his peripheral vision, an essential attribute for his team glass blowing
practice. A dislocated shoulder a couple
of years later cemented his sideline stature, But as he has said "Once I
stepped back, I liked the view, more choreographer than dancer, more supervisor
than participant, more director than actor." And as he told Timothy
Anglin Burgard in 2008 “But there's also the thrill
of figuring out a new piece or installation and coming up with new ideas. The
vocabulary is there, but what I do with it continues to change."
Amongst these
changes was the moving of the exhibition of his glass sculptures out from the
confines of the white cube into the public space in general and gardens in
particular. From Seattle’s Chihuly Garden and Glass to London’s Kew Gardens,
from Denver’s Botanic Gardens to Chrysler Museum of Art’s
Memorial Garden, Chihuly has installed his glass works to mostly popular
appeal especially in the dramatic artificial light of evening.
But for Chihuly
it is still all about the glass. As he has said “The technology hasn’t
really changed...We use the same tools they used 2,000 years ago. The
difference is that when I started, everyone wanted to control the blowing
process. I just went with it. The natural elements of fire, movement, gravity,
and centrifugal force were always there, and are always with us. The difference
was that I worked in this abstract way and could let the forces of nature have
a bigger role in the ultimate shape.”
His current exhibition Chihuly in the Garden is currently on show at The Chrysler Museum of Art until
the 7th of June.
1 comment:
Post a Comment