Page 35 - Studio International - January 1965
P. 35

Pol  Bury               equipoise;  of  firm  movements in defined spaces.  It  is
           Neu/ colonnes en quacre morceaux,   nonsense to regard  Stankiewicz as an anecdotal com­
           1964                    mentator on  contemporary  life.  His best pieces are as
           80 cm. high
           Lefebre Gallery         strong and timeless as Etruscan or Sardinian sculptures.
                                    It  is  an  error,  in  the  same  sense,  to  think  of  John
                                   Chamberlain's polychrome sculptures in terms of their
                                   origins.  Their  origins-the  remains  of  scrapped  auto­
                                   mobile  bodies-are  irrelevant.  What  is  relevant  is
                                   Chamberlain's consistent baroque attitude which presses
                                   him to organize very complicated sequences of coloured
                                   forms  in  three  dimensions.  His  penchant  for  gracious
                                   colours-dusky rose,  moss green,  blues and scarlets­
                                   gives  a  lyrical  cast  to  his  works.
                                    Another artist using unorthodox materials-tent canvas,
                                   wires and welded armatures-toward an almost classical
                                   end is  Lee  Bontecou.  Her reliefs are invariably strictly
                                   controlled  essays  in  spatial  play.  Their  mysterious
                                   character  emanates  primarily from  her peculiar imagi­
                                  nation,  and  only  secondarily  from  the  materials  and
                                  means of  organization  (which derive to a great extent
                                   from cubist principles).
                                    The other four artists in the exhibition represent more
                                  radical departures in point of view.  George Segal intro­
                                  duces  the  realistic  environment  as  a  foil  for  his
                                  apparitional white plaster figures.  In the play between
                                  the  real  (a  whole  corner  of  a  cluttered  kitchen,  for
                                  instance)  and  the  almost-real,  Segal  makes  a  subtle
                                  and  compelling  point.  Since  his figures  are  cast from
                                  life, they are almost real.  But not almost-real like wax­
                                  work  figures:  Segal's  characters  are  only  summarily
                                  defined,  so  that  they  might  stand  for  anyone  or  any
                                  presence thrust  into the static world of objects.  In the
                                  commanding  play  upon  verisimilitude  in  the  figures,
                                  Segal  accomplishes  so  much  that  the  'real'  environ­
                                  ments are scarcely necessary.
                                    Peter Agostini,  whose  plaster-cast  balloons.  pillows.
                                  and still-life materials play also upon the subtle differ­
                                  ences between the 'real' and the imagined, comes closer
                                  in  sensibility  to  the  surrealists.  His  play  with  con­
                                  tradictions  (soft  stuff  made  hard,  and  vice  versa)  is
                                  designed  to  rouse  the  same  quick  juncture  of  alien
                                  images as a good surrealist metaphor.
                                    Mark  di  Suvero  spreads  his thoughts  in  spaces  that
                                  range  wide,  beyond  the  accustomed  circumscribed
                                  places for sculpture. Using heavy beams still bearing the
                                  traces of their burdens  (bridges? harbour pilings?), di
                                  Suvero constructs strong images that belong not to the
                                  salon but to the outdoor, manmade environment.
                                    George  Sugarman  offers  a  specifically  non-classical
                                  vision.  His laminated wood forms, painted brightly, are
                                  posed  in  unlikely  combinations  and  balanced  in  un­
                                  accustomed schemes. The breakdown of conventional
                                  ideas of harmony and counterpoint is final in his work.
                                   With  interest  in  kinetic  sculpture  steadily  rising,  Pol
                                  Bury's exhibition  at  the  Lefebre  Gallery  couldn't  have
                                  been better timed. It served to remind us that movement
                                  in  itself  is  of  little  interest,  but  when  coupled  with
                                  fantasy,  it  becomes  a  component-one  might  almost  formed  in  the  imagination  to  do  with  the  mysterious
                                  say a material-that exercises tremendous magnetism.  rhythms of bodily  and mental  interchange.
                                    Bury's use of slow movement is neither mimetic nor   Bury's fantasy,  which is what distinguishes his work
                                  abstract. That is, the soothing andante does not directly  from  that  of  the  institutional  schools  of  kinetic  art,
                                  suggest  moving  trees  or  heaving  seas.  as  do  certain  moves  with  great  fluency.  Each  of  his  thoughtfully
                                  kinetic sculptures. but, on the other hand, it is not purely  fashioned  works  is  distinct  and  affecting  in  its  own
                                  mechanical. Each movement-say of smoothly polished  peculiar  way.  Whether  he  defies  gravity  by  having
                                  balls on a tilted plane-seems governed by the neces­  weighty,  elegantly stained and polished spheres move
                                  sities  of the  ensemble  of forms.  If,  in  the  attenuated,  upward  instead  of  down,  or  whether  he  plays  with
                                  almost  imperceptible  trajectories  of  his  forms,  Bury  seemingly unmotivated random movements, as he does
                                  suggests  a  metaphor,  it  is  a  metaphor  quickly  trans-  in the profuse forest of small points that sway and cue
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