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Jose Pedro Croft.


GALERIE FUCARES

One of Jose Pedro Croft's main avenues of inquiry is the delimitation of what is external and internal to each form. This question is developed both in the internal structure of each piece and in its articulation articulation

In phonetics, the shaping of the vocal tract (larynx, pharynx, and oral and nasal cavities) by positioning mobile organs (such as the tongue) relative to other parts that may be rigid (such as the hard palate) and thus modifying the airstream to produce speech
 within the surrounding space. In his more recent works the dominant form has become the box, more specifically the box-arch, taking over from the box-tombs and box-houses. The horizon of the artist's formal references stretches from the field of architecture into the field of everyday objects in which the arch joins with the table or the bowl.

This exhibition illustrated a particularly dynamic moment in this sculptor's activity. The entrance hall contained a pile of differently shaped bowls unstably set on a base that gave the piece the outline of a small, leaning column. With these pieces, Croft CROFT, obsolete. A little close adjoining to a dwelling-house, and enclosed for pasture or arable, or any particular use. Jacob's Law Dict.  induced a short-circuit between monumental quotation and domestic utensil while raising the question of balance. This is a constant in his work, from his unstable columns of the mid '80s, formed from an infinitude of small fragments or dug out right at the moment of imminent collapse, to the spheres in enigmatic en·ig·mat·ic   or en·ig·mat·i·cal
adj.
Of or resembling an enigma; puzzling: a professor's enigmatic grading system. See Synonyms at ambiguous.
 suspension or immohility inside boxes (which apparently defy de·fy  
tr.v. de·fied, de·fy·ing, de·fies
1.
a. To oppose or resist with boldness and assurance: defied the blockade by sailing straight through it.

b.
 the laws of gravity) that he created at the beginning of the '90s.

The piece in the next room--a semiopen box in which a solid parallelepiped rises up on one of the sides--established a certain ambiguity between the geometrical purity of the forms of abstract sculpture and the hybrid nature of architectonic ar·chi·tec·ton·ic   also ar·chi·tec·ton·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to architecture or design.

2. Having qualities, such as design and structure, that are characteristic of architecture:
 references. In the main room of the gallery stood the two most important pieces in the exhibition. A cylinder made of chicken wire, clumsily clum·sy  
adj. clum·si·er, clum·si·est
1. Lacking physical coordination, skill, or grace; awkward.

2. Awkwardly constructed; unwieldy: clumsy wooden shoes; a clumsy sentence.
 covered in plaster, leant leant  
v. Chiefly British
A past tense and a past participle of lean1.


leant
Verb

a past of lean1

leant lean
 against the wall on a chair with only two of its legs on the ground. In using the chair, Croft incorporated, without reconstructive mediations, solutions that derive directly from the work in the studio itself. The other piece made of the leaning trunk of a cone (also in plaster) was placed under two articulated plywood plywood, manufactured board composed of an odd number of thin sheets of wood glued together under pressure with grains of the successive layers at right angles. Laminated wood differs from plywood in that the grains of its sheets are parallel.  slabs that touched it in certain places and, due to the way in which the piece was installed, initially hid it from the viewer. With maximum economy of form and process, Croft creates a situation at the limit of stability; the sensation that were it to go any further the piece would not stand up, but any less on the edge and it would lack the intended dynamism. The second determining characteristic in the author's work is the dynamization dynamization

a strategy for promoting bone healing in fractures by allowing some movement or compressive loading.
 of the spatial relationships within each work and between each work, and the movement of the viewer's body and gaze. This is precisely the effect of simply placing in one of the corners of the room, and half-way up the wall, a bowl molded out of synthetic resin, which, when we come close to it, we realize has no bottom. Without yielding to the artifices of staging or spectacle, Croft brings life, instability, and dynamism to a situation that would otherwise be stable and dead.

Alexandre Melo
COPYRIGHT 1994 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Galeria Fucares, Madrid, Spain
Author:Melo, Alexander
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 1994
Words:498
Previous Article:Betty Goodwin. (Galerie Rene Blouin, Montreal, Canada)
Next Article:Alain Jacquet. (Centre Georges Pompidou and Galerie Beaubourg, Paris, France)
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