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![]() Portrait of the Artist Fred Sandback
Like any good (or great) Minimalist work of art, Fred Sandback's
sculptures emit an air of ease; they're easy on the eyes, quite
possibly
easily made, and once you "get it," easily enjoyed. Although in order
to successfully exist, these sculptures ask kindly if they can have some
of your space. If you allow, they will become breathing things that
solidify airspace and pull your perception. If you deny, they are merely
yarn strung between several points on the walls, ceiling and floor. To
turn them on, so to speak, one must tune in.
Born in New York in 1943, Sandback studied at Yale and emerged in
the late sixties amid art's period of critical reevaluation. He has
since become widely recognized and exhibited in Europe and the United
States. The Dia Foundation erected a museum dedicated to his art in
Massachusetts in 1981, closed it in 1996, and currently keeps several
works on permanent display in their Beacon, New York location. The Dia
Beacon is an excellent environment to experience Sandback's art
because
it is afforded a pristine spatial clarity. Sandback was 59 years old
when he died in 2003.
There is nothing precious or magical about the yarn that Sandback used.
He admittedly purchased it at Wal-Mart. The physical work, the yarn
strung taut, is straightforward, but it turns out that Sandback was
"drawing in space." He is now commonly granted the title of innovator
of a technique that produces three-dimensional volumetric objects out
of
thin air. Like a doorway, Sandback's objects are defined by their
openness, where to enter one area is also where to exit another. As
such, Sandback's sculptures put you in their space quite literally. Or
rather, this is the illusion, for there is no "object" to speak of
except the heightened awareness of one's own bodily perception.
Sandback's game is a conceptual Möbius strip that has been
fascinating the art world for decades. If you choose not to partake in
theoretical mind trips, Sandback's art is still rewarding. Most of the
sculptures' strength is drawn from their quietude and their composure,
and that is in itself refreshing. Fred Sandback shows at Rhona Hoffman Gallery, 118 North Peoria,
(312)455-1990, through February 24.
Also by Jason Foumberg Portrait of the Artist
Tip of the Week
Portrait of an Artist
Tip of the Week
Tip of the Week
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