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| July/August
2004 |
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Vol.
23 No. 6 |
| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
BWAC
at Empire-Fulton Ferry State Park
by Jonathan Goodman
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Robert Winkler, Back Again, 2003.
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The
21st annual Brooklyn Waterfront Artists Coalition (BWAC) sculpture show
took place over the summer at the Empire-Fulton Ferry State Park, which
is located directly north of the Brooklyn side of the Brooklyn Bridge
in New York City. The park space, flanked by large warehouses, a number
of which have been given over to art activities, was a nice space in which
to have a show, with its spectacular views of the Brooklyn and Manhattan
Bridges and downtown Manhattan skyline across the East River. Viewers
strolled from one outdoor work to the next in the grassy park; the day
this writer visited the show, there was a group of plein-air painters
carefully rendering what they observed on site. Generally speaking, this
group show, which encompassed the work of some 30 artists, had little
in common stylistically beyond a beguiling funkiness, offset by the proletarian
surroundings of the area.
Because
all the works were shown outdoors, materials were sturdy, with a decided
inclination toward the industrial. BWAC itself is a decidedly democratic
affiliation, its one requirement for membership being a Brooklyn studio.
As for the exhibition, curated by participating artists Ursula Clark and
Richard Brachman, it was entirely a labor of love, with the artists themselves
doing all the work installing and removing the sculptures. The range of
expression was very broad, from Brachmans Drums of War (all entries
date from 2003), with its steel drums covered with rawhide and their connection
with the Iraq war and occupation, to Clarks Archeological Rhythm,
with its branches and natural ephemera (eggs and bones) making a plea
for the fragility of nature. Linda Cunninghams Structural Transformationsabstract
trees made of twisted-steel I-beams and 150-year-old woodjoins a
historical sense of materials to the high industry of New Yorks
constant construction and reconstruction. Ana Golicis Without Words,
a tree trunk and bench made of slender wooden poles, emphasized the contrast
between the natural and the manmade at a site where both are in evidence,
with the river flowing past the city skyline.
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Matt Johnson, Empire State, 2003.
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The
stacks of vinyl records in Entropy by David Popple rose up from the sand,
creating black towers seemingly without a function. In the sculpture Perception
of Absence by Steve Dolbin, a block of cement with a figure hollowed out
lies just underneath the Brooklyn Bridge, treating absence in a poetic
manner. Gnosis, a group of variously colored figurines made of ceramic
and steel, by Renee Iacone and Trudy Solin, was established against a
wall of a warehouse abutting the park; there was something moving, and
also slightly disconcerting, about the presence of these figures, who
mutely looked onto the park. One of the more accomplished, and more recognizable,
sculptures was Matt Johnsons wooden version of the Empire State
Building; set against the backdrop of the East River and Manhattan1s skyline.
It seemed to poke fun at the size and monumentality of its surroundings
even as it offered for apotheosis one of the citys best known and
most loved buildings. Legged, by Lisa Beckner, consisted of five legs
made from shopping bags; the legs hung from a steel frame and looked positively
absurd in the middle of the site; that of course, was part of its idiosyncrasy
as sculpture. Brooklyn Bridge/Mayakovsky by Alastair Noble, consisted
of five doorlike screens angling out from a single point, so that the
screens edges circumscribed a half circle; the markings on the screens
reference the great Russian modernist poet Mayakovskys ode to the
Brooklyn Bridge.
The
energy and rough wit of the exhibition made it engaging; there was a directness
and a spontaneity to the art, unlike the studied trendiness of a lot of
gallery work on show in the city. In a way, the venue itself made the
showit is hard to find a more attractive spot, visually speaking,
than the Empire Fulton Ferry State Park. In a show like this, inclusion
of different styles is one of the inevitable effects of the show1s openness,
which is for the most part a good thing. The intellectual honesty of the
art was repeated in the artists truth to materials, which gave a
funky cast to the overall experience. Now that the annual exhibition is
more than 20 years old, there is even a bit of tradition behind the sculptures.
Now that there is a generation1s worth of democratic effort and expression,
the efforts of the artists in the 21st edition of the exhibition may be
seen in the light of an ongoing effort to make local artists work
available to a curious public.
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