By Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, July 28, 2017
"Save Our Children” basketry by Andrea DeFlon, courtesy American Art
|
If your idea of basketry is mired in the 19th century, you
need to visit All Things Considered:
Basketry in the 21st Century at American Art Company for an
eye-opening.
This is not your grandma’s basket weaving; this is contemporary
sculptural art, free of all traditional restrictions as to
what a basket can or should be. There is a wide variety of materials including
wood, glass, beads, gut, metal and various found objects. Approximately half of
the pieces in the show are shaped like various types of vessels — boxes, bowls,
purses, seed pods. The rest are more like free form sculpture. Some are tiny,
delicate and jewel-like, while others are
massive and monumental in concept.
In the front window, there is a piece called “Garlic” by Pat Hickman
that looks like long, flat, wide strips of sea kelp shaped into a huge clove of
garlic standing about four feet tall. Any verbal description I can think of
will sound ugly; it’s squat, dull of color and rather lifeless, yet there is
beauty in it and an undeniable strong presence, like a boulder thrown in your
path.
The same can be said of Andrea DeFlon’s “Save Our Children,” a series of
three boxes made of a dark, translucent substance, one box with an open face
allowing viewers to see the fiery red floor and dark face inside. The boxes are
stitched with darts of red thread. On the fronts and tops of the boxes are
printed the gray faces of men and women — possibly children, it’s hard to tell.
They are gaunt, with dark shadowed eyes, and they appear ghostly and sad. This
one is emotionally draining to contemplate. Celebrated Tacoma artist Jill
Nordfors-Clark is represented by a couple of large pieces in needle lace
embroidery, hog casing, reed, acrylic paint,
and yarn. Her large piece “When a Tree Falls in the Forest” is a series of
open-weave tubes in a brilliant golden color representing trees standing proud
in a forest, with a single tree fallen and resting at an angle. This piece is
powerful due to its size and upward thrust, yet extremely delicate in its
construction of fine, see-through lace. Unfortunately, a colorful quilt stands
behind it. There are quilts throughout the gallery, which are beautiful and
complement the basketry well, but in this case the quilt conflicts with the
basketry. This piece needs to stand in front of a blank wall.
“When a Tree Falls in the Forest” needle lace embroidery, hog casing, reed, acrylic paint, and yarn by Jill Nordfors-Clark, courtesy American Art |
One of the least basket-like pieces in the show is Leah Gerrard’s
“Cycles,” steel wire and found object. Gerrard hails from Vashon. This piece
reminds me of Marcel Duchamp’s “Bicycle Wheel.”
A woven rope of steel wire that looks like intestines hangs from a pulley
wheel, combining industrial strength with organic life. It is audacious and
in-our-face, and like Nordfors-Clark’s trees, it blends strength with delicacy.
Another local area artist is Barbara De Pirro
from Shelton who is represented with a couple of modest pieces, “Bloom
2” and “Radiate.” Both are made with what appears to be hundreds of “leaves” of
white plastic that are layered like fish scales on wire mesh frames. “Bloom 2”
hangs from the ceiling like some kind of nest or pod and “Radiate” is a
circular form that seems to want to expand outward. Both are beautiful in their
shining whiteness — a tribute to organic nature made with waste plastic, an
intelligent concept beautifully executed.
This is the ninth installment of this biennial
juried exhibition presented by the National Basketry Organization.
All Things Considered: Basketry in the 21st Century, Tuesday-Friday 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. to 5
p.m., through Aug. 26, American Art Company, 1126 Broadway Plaza, Tacoma,
253.272.4327, http://www.americanartco.com/.
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