Paloma Varga Weisz: Barbara Gladstone Gallery.Paloma Varga Weisz has a name almost too good to be true: Teutonic and Northern in one part, Latin and Southern in the others--the novels of Thomas Mann Noun 1. Thomas Mann - German writer concerned about the role of the artist in bourgeois society (1875-1955) Mann in one person. Fun with people's names is just fun, of course, but Weisz's work does have the schizoid schizoid /schiz·oid/ (skit´soid) 1. denoting the traits that characterize the schizoid personality. 2. tension this particular game implies. At first glance her sculpture looks somber and conjures the sacred, and the works shown here, in an exhibition titled "Chor" (Choir)--her first US solo appearance--explicitly address the psychic space and physical furniture of the church: Weisz's carved busts, and their limewood medium, recall the religious statuary stat·u·ar·y n. pl. stat·u·ar·ies 1. Statues considered as a group. 2. The art of making statues. 3. A sculptor. adj. Of, relating to, or suitable for a statue. of old Europe This article is about the term in contemporary politics. For the archaeological meaning, see Old European culture. In January 2003 the term Old Europe surfaced after former U.S. , and their arrangement along benches suggests both the ornamented pews of early houses of worship and the people who might once have sat there--women in cowls and butterfly headdresses, men in monklike habits or lavish fur bonnets. Yet some of the figures develop a goofy quality. A torso may rise conventionally up to an Elizabethan ruff only to be topped by the head of a beagle beagle, breed of dog beagle, breed of small, compact hound developed over centuries in England and introduced into the United States in the 1870s. It stands between 10 and 15 in. (25.4–38.1 cm) high at the shoulder and weighs between 20 and 40 lb (9. ; a man may make a hat out of a cloacal cloacal emanating from or pertaining to cloaca. cloacal kiss the contact which occurs during insemination in birds when the vent of the female is everted exposing the cloacal mucosa against which the phallus of the male is pressed. nest of sausages; a woman may have one head but three faces, each sharing at least one eye with its neighbor. While the mood of each figure stays grave and even pious, a vein of sensuous play runs unevenly through the group, leavening its austerity. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] At heart, one senses (or perhaps hopes), Weisz is a rather simple artist, fascinated by and skilled in an old-fashioned genus of modeling whose sanctified sanc·ti·fy tr.v. sanc·ti·fied, sanc·ti·fy·ing, sanc·ti·fies 1. To set apart for sacred use; consecrate. 2. To make holy; purify. 3. content she adjusts through infusions of personal fantasy. Another, more ambitious side emerges in her installation strategies and larger-scale works. Fallende Frau, doppelkopfig (Falling woman, double-faced), 2004, is an apparently full-size female figure, which, however, is so elaborately swathed in artfully draped drape v. draped, drap·ing, drapes v.tr. 1. To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds: draped the coffin with a flag; a robe that draped her figure. gray cloth that only its extremities are visible. Since almost any armature armature, in art: see sculpture. Armature That part of an electric rotating machine which includes the main current-carrying winding. could lie under that wrapping, at least part of the work's aura originates in a suspicion of discontinuity and fracture: It seems doubtful that an artist who had shaped a body as carefully as Weisz has shaped this figure's head, hands, and feet would so hide her craft. The fabric, simultaneously extravagant in its rich folds and severe in its color, supplies another visual displacement, clashing with the simpler style of the carved elements as if time has leapt from the medieval to the Baroque. Meanwhile, the woman hangs in midair, upside down, and has two faces, on the front and back of her head. Given the Christian references elsewhere in the show, one thinks of Lucifer, the falling angel; but the point is not so much to identify the figure as to register the levels of artifice and rupture that disturb its solemn strangeness. Weisz sets up a similar disjunction--a collision between different kinds of purity--when she places her limewood busts on entirely contemporary planar benches in a monochrome-gray synthetic. But this installation only points up how much more absorbing the sculptures themselves are than the elaborate schemes she devises for them, schemes that tend to read as attempts to update or make relevant a rather traditional art. The peculiar identity Weisz gives her sober yet fantastical characters, and her handling of the soft density of limewood, its weight and tender surface, are enough. |
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