Turned Wood and Hilga Winter’s paper sculpture
By Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly
Volcano, Aug. 23, 2018
“Leaves,” sculpted paper by Helga Winter, courtesy American Art Company |
Women in Wood continues through Sept. 15 at American Art Company, showcasing turned
wood pieces by 13 women woodworkers from around the country, including Helga
Winter, Betty Scarpino, Cindy Drozda, Dixie Biggs, Donna Zils Banfield and
Barbara Dill. As a bonus, Winter is showing eight pieces from a new series she
calls sculptural paintings. They are essentially paintings that stand two to three
inches out from the wall made of book pages rolled into tubes and attached to a
flat surface with the cut edges facing outward and from sheets of paper with at
least one ragged edge that are stacked in an accordion arrangement. In many of
her pieces the paper is colored in fire colors such as red, yellow and orange — even the blue and green tones, normally cool
colors, are hot. In others, the paper is left its natural color to form
patterns that call to mind parchment and tree bark.
The pieces in which the paper is not colored are more meaningful in that
they reflect on the material from which the paper comes. For example, the large
piece in the entrance called “The Secret Life of Trees” reminds us of the
working of roots underground and the intertwining of limbs and leaves. The more
colorful pieces are exciting, but I suspect over time the excitement might wear
thin.
Unless you peer into what the artist calls their hidden stories. The
paper is from books, and the words from the books are mostly out of sight and
unreadable. “I have hidden the words and knowledge that nevertheless are still
there,” Winter writes. “By turning books inside out, I want to turn my stories,
my perceptions, inside out, recognize how they can diminish my life, and then
create new and conscious stories that are close to the current truth.”
The turned wood is all beautifully crafted. Scarpino might well be the
star of the wood show. There are five pieces by her displayed in a group near
the back of the gallery on black sculpture stands. Each of the pieces is small,
and there is quite a variety of style among the five. “Be Seeded” is a sensual
seedpod made of dark cherry wood. Lying in the pod are four round white balls
or seeds. There is a nice contrast between dark and light, and rough and smooth
forms that all fit together smoothly despite their contrasts.
Another piece in the group, which was created in collaboration with
Biggs, is called “Egg and Crate.” Inside a tiny wood-slat box is a decorative
egg resting on a bed of wood shavings. It is a fun little item that would make
for a conversation starter on someone’s shelf at home.
Kristen Le Vier is showing a couple of turned-wood snakes. “Slither” is
a painted snake, half green and half black, in European pear and acrylic paint.
Her “Talisman for the Home” I see more as a humorous icon than a talisman. Made
of maple, epoxy, clay and acrylic, it is a snake wrapped around a long-handled
wooden spoon. Imagine seeing this on your kitchen counter.
Also of note are a couple of dark wood decorative platters: Merryl
Saylan’s “Padauk Platter” and Sally Ault’s “Carved Platter.” Both are notable
for their rich coloring and subtle patterns.
If you like fine craft work, I suggest you stop by American Art Company
to take a look at these works.
Women in Wood, Tuesday-Friday 10 a.m. to
5:30 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., through Sept. 15, American Art
Company, 1126 Broadway Plaza, Tacoma, 253.272.4327,
http://www.americanartco.com/.
No comments:
Post a Comment