Deborah Butterfield, San Diego Museum of Art
Auteur : Deborah Butterfield
Date de publication : 1996
Éditeur : The Museum
Nombre de pages : 70
Résumé du livre
Deborah Butterfield has made sculptures of horses since the early 1970s of various materials such as mud, sticks, barbed wire, fencing, corrugated metal, and other found materials, including a wrecked airstream trailer and the remains of a pea cannery. They confront the viewer with the -- complexity of their formal sculptural presence, specific personality, and inner core of meaning, which, according to the artist, "isn't about horses at all". Butterfield, who was born and grew up in San Diego, developed the ideas leading to her life-size horse sculptures before moving to Montana, where she currently lives and works.
Unlike the militaristic horses of western art history, Butterfield's early horses were mares, unridden and usually solitary. She has succeeded in transferring her explorations of a female sensibility into extraordinarily satisfying work that transcends but does not ignore contemporary feminist implications and artistic explorations.