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| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
Santa
Monica, California
Guy Dill
Bobbie Greenfield Gallery
by
Collette Chattopadhyay
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Guy
Dill, Venice Angel, 2002. Bronze, 144 x 44 x 44 in
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While
the works in Guy Dills recent exhibition extend his familiar explorations
of non-objective sculptural form, they intriguingly hint of the similes
that exist between non-objective, abstract, and representational modes
of art. Dill showed seven non-objective bronzes alongside nearly a dozen
charcoal figure drawings of female nudes, to the astonishment of those
who assume categories of artistic production to be fixed rather than fluid
entities.
The most commanding
works remain the sculptures, the majority of which are finished with a
near black patina that underscores their focus on form. Reconsidering
conceptual ideals such as circles, ellipses, and squares, which have fascinated
humanity for centuries, Dills new works manifest an impressive command
of visual history, conversing with ideas spanning from the Renaissance
through the present. With postmodern panache, his ironically hand-welded
sculptures comment not only on the industrial standardization of formof
significance in different ways to both Constructivists and Minimalistsbut
also hint at the widely unacknowledged link between the modern love affair
with perfected industrial form and the ancient fascination with perfected
formal ideals.
While many critics
have commented on Dills affinities to Constructivism, this body
of work explores sculptural terrain that transverses time and space, synthesizing
at the minimum pre-Constructivist, Constructivist, and Minimalist concerns.
Dill's reworking of Brancusis themes extends the early 20th-century
sculptors claim that his works were not abstract but rather captured
the essence of things. Yet while rethinking Brancusi, Dill fabricates
pieces whose non-objective syntax simultaneously uses and deconstructs
Minimalist rhetoric.
His Bankers
Knot (2002) and Lan (2002), for example, work with basic sculptural concepts,
building up form conceptually and physically from the foundation. Moving
from elemental idealized forms to leaning, tilting, and balanced upper
structures, these works display a profoundly rich and postmodern visual
language. The witty Bankers Knot rises from a cubic base, which
both alludes to Renaissance symbolism (the finite universe) and recalls
Minimalist work of the 1960s. Atop that, with a wink to Leonardo and his
Canon of Proportions, is a circular disk, which in the 16th century referenced
the infinite cosmic sphere. In Dills wry postmodern work, the disk
reflects contemporary obsessions with economic ideals, as manifest in
the circle-coin form that serves as the formal genesis for the rest of
the sculpture. From this base a tumble of three precariously balanced
vertical forms unleash dynamic energy. With visual jest, the vertical
components of these sculpturesbronze two-by-foursspoof Minimalism's
industrially manufactured forms. Rising from and returning to its base,
Bankers Knot comments on the contemporary conundrum of visual ideals
and their relation to money matters.
Probing humanitys
ongoing fascination with perfected form, Dill rethinks the inherited meaning
of elemental shapes and form. While intimating that the classical repertoire
has been corrupted and secularized, his works continue to acknowledge
their significance in the ongoing fabrication of sculpture.
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