Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,503,364 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Tony Cragg: Marian Goodman Gallery.


There's a kind of scientific air to Tony Cragg's recent sculptures, as if he'd been studying the effects of movement on mass in a wind tunnel. Mass in forceful movement, movement embodied by mass: Declinations, 2003, makes the strategies clear, all the more so because it seems centripetal centripetal /cen·trip·e·tal/ (sen-trip´e-t'l)
1. afferent (1).

2. corticipetal.


cen·trip·e·tal
adj.
1. Moving or directed toward a center or axis.
 and centrifugal at once. Concentrated toward some hypothetical core while relentlessly expanding beyond itself, the piece seamlessly integrates fluidity and solidity, thinness and thickness, instability and stability with a kind of dramatic flair. Indeed, the work, like many in this exhibition, could be an aerodynamic gesture abruptly terminated, as though self-containment had been imposed on the uncontainable. The sense of swirling--a demiurgic dem·i·urge  
n.
1. A powerful creative force or personality.

2. A public magistrate in some ancient Greek states.

3.
 maelstrom--informs all the sculptures here, even the implicitly figural fig·ur·al  
adj.
Of, consisting of, or forming a pictorial composition of human or animal figures.



figur·al·ly adv.

Adj.
; the vaguely nauseating, excitingly exotic, mottled mottled /mot·tled/ (mot´ld) marked by spots or blotches of different colors or shades.  jungle greenness of Green Early Forms, 2003, suggests it could have come out of some primordial ooze.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

While there is a peculiarly biomorphic freedom and expressionistic energy to Cragg's sculptures, many of them also seem as if they had been meticulously plotted on the computer--like Frank Gehry's own biomorphic/expressionistic curves. The computer has made it possible to realize "difficult" new shapes in architecture; why not in sculpture as well? Gehry has spoken of a connection between these forms and childhood memories of seeing living fish chopped up by his mother. Whether or not Cragg has used a computer, one wonders if there isn't a similar associative logic at work here: The evocative edginess of his sculptures, with their suddenly emerging profiles, hint as much.

Cragg's sculpture is often regarded as the ne plus ultra of what was once called concrete abstraction. The restless interplay of shapes and spaces and his use of a range of materials, some with a longer history in art than others (stone, wood, and bronze in contrast to fiberglass, Kevlar, and stainless steel stainless steel: see steel.
stainless steel

Any of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10–30% chromium. The presence of chromium, together with low carbon content, gives remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat.
, which are sometimes vividly painted), support this. The shape of one wood sculpture seems to have been generated by its own grain, freely playing on and emulating its meandering yet systematic movement. (Another thought: Sometimes their convulsive con·vul·sive
adj.
1. Characterized by or having the nature of convulsions.

2. Having or producing convulsions.



convulsive

pertaining to, characterized by, or of the nature of a convulsion.
 dynamics and bizarre appearance give the sculptures a surreal flavor. Is Cragg's work a species of abstract surrealism?) Finally, despite a preoccupation with the complexities of three-dimensional projection, Cragg also conveys a visionary experience of the body, a sense of the bizarre becoming of corporeal Possessing a physical nature; having an objective, tangible existence; being capable of perception by touch and sight.

Under Common Law, corporeal hereditaments are physical objects encompassed in land, including the land itself and any tangible object on it, that can be
 being. They objectify ob·jec·ti·fy  
tr.v. ob·jec·ti·fied, ob·jec·ti·fy·ing, ob·jec·ti·fies
1. To present or regard as an object: "Because we have objectified animals, we are able to treat them impersonally" 
 a profoundly unconscious, unnameable experience, reminding us that the body remains an enigma and a fantasy however much we think we understand its workings.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:New York
Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:414
Previous Article:Jack Smith: Mitchell Algus.(New York)
Next Article:Glenn Ligon: d'Amelio Terras.(New York)



Related Articles
Maria Nordman. (Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, New York)
Tony Cragg.(BookForum)
JEREMY LEWISON.(Director of Collections, Tate Modern, London, England)
TONY CRAGG.(art exhibition)(Brief Article)
Out of the ordinary: Elayne Goodman uses everyday objects to create sought-after contemporary folk art. (Culture Center).
Rineke Dijkstra: Marian Goodman Gallery.(New York)
Gabriel Orozco; Marian Goodman Gallery.(New York)
Richard Deacon: Marian Goodman Gallery.(NEW YORK)
Everybody was there: the wrong guide to New York in 2004.
Louise Lawler: Metro Pictures.(Critical Essay)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles