Jeanne Silverthorne
Auteur : Jeanne Silverthorne
Date de publication : 2012
Éditeur : McKee Gallery
Nombre de pages : 48
Résumé du livre
"Although the artist says she looks at her studio as an archaeological site, it is more than just the excavation of a physical place. The excavation uncovers an emotional place as well, where the viewer recognizes the darker aspects of the human condition and identifies with them in these works. Starting from her particular site Silverthorne creates another, more universal place where we have all been. The exhibition will have 30 new sculptures, first fashioned in clay and then cast in rubber, including 2 small figures, one a skeleton, the other a self-portrait; several floor pieces with dandelions pushing up or roots pushing down; sticks of dynamite with phosphorescent sparks called long fuse and short fuse; a series of small and large storage crates in rubber and wood; light bulbs, hanging or resting on crates; and delicate butterflies, all legs and tentacles individually cast in rubber and then carefully glued together, fleeting symbols of optimism and joy." -- Text from New York Art Beat (see link below).