Audrey Hurd's first training was as a printmaker. It is interesting to think of sculpture show in terms of mark making. |
I have been thrown out of more than one gallery for touching
the art. The first time was many
years ago at the Montreal gallery of Mira Godard. I am trying to remember if the work of art was a
Lichtenstein or a Pollock. Either
way, what I want to express is that I have a profound need to touch things and
I don't believe I am alone in that regard. (Wanting to touch the art is probably one of the reasons I
became a curator wearing those white cotton gloves the conservators give
you.) The primal need to touch
reminds me of those experiments where they offer the baby monkey the choice
between the bottle of milk or a simulated mother monkey to cuddle with. The cuddle wins out.
Well, there is an exhibition currently up at The Rooms
Provincial Art Gallery that should appeal to your inner monkey because it
invites you to touch the art by Audrey Hurd. Coincidentally, there is an exhibition by Deb Dumka at The
Craft Gallery that opens this weekend and it is also encourages viewers to
interact with the pieces through touch, sight and sound.
Detail of the Plasticine pillar by Hurd being held. |
Audrey Hurd's centerpiece in the exhibition Until it
remembers you incorporates three
"hugging" columns that are roughly the height of the artist. They are made of Memory Foam,
Plasticine and concrete. Oh that
magic number 3. I couldn't help
but think of the storybook connotations:
the three wishes, Goldilocks and the Three Bears with their three
chairs, beds and porridge. Like
Goldilocks we are all in search of our "just right". "Was this show 'just right'? I
asked myself.
I think Hurd's basic concept for the show is solid and
suitably intrigued to learn more I went to her artist's talk. Hurd is an enthusiastic, engaging speaker. She seemed liked a natural
hugger. It is easy to see how her
infectious, bubbly persona persuaded the tech crew of The Rooms to assist her
in constructing her sculptures. In
the talk, she pointed out that it was the first time she had ever tackled such
a project, which was accomplished through an Elbow Room artist residency at the
in-house studio of The Rooms.
Hurd shared that in preparation for the "Holding
Pillars" (as they are called in the exhibition brochure) that she had
first experimented by embracing her bedding and documenting it as it released
from the impact of the hug. Using
what is at hand is the time worn strategy of penniless artists worldwide. Unfortunately, she did not tell us what
other materials with which she had experimented or whether they had any special meaning
for her. To her credit, Hurd did
raise the thematic topic of desire shaping matter, which is a juicy
thought. And on that note, the
concise exhibition brochure has an essay by curator Mireille Eagan that is well
worth reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment