Showing posts with label sculpture exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sculpture exhibition. Show all posts

Friday, November 3, 2017

Gustavo Aceves Horse Sculpture




Here's lookin' at you, Kid!


Dear Art Lover,
     Near Piazza Verdi in Lucca, Italy, not so long ago, I discovered a wonderful public art exhibition of horses and about migration [of people].  My last post: 
featured images of Mexican sculptor Gustavo Aceves multi-figure “Passo Sospesosculpture work of humans and horses.  The entire show is titled “Lapidarium” and is just wonderful!       

     I quote part of the sign for this sculpture grouping [I rewrote a little to correct the poor translation to English]:
     These sculptures represent a sort of “monument to the vanquished,” a metaphor of the unceasing migration process over thousands of years. 
Gustavo Aceves, Mexican sculptor, Lucca, Italy, sculpture exhibition, public art, horse sculpture, Lapidarium, immigration, migration
The leglessness made me wonder if the artist wanted this sculpture exhibited just above water.

     This truly monumental horse has his body split in half.  The back half has a tall form attached, perhaps representing a rider?  Behind that tall shape is a skull attached to a space along the “spine.”  There are backwards numbers (like many license plates) stamped into the torso of the horse, large sets and then many smaller ones.  I am not sure if the bones mounted at the top back end of the front half of the horse are to imply starvation or something else.  Compositionally, it aids the eye to look to the back half of the sculpture, with its gracefully curving top line mirroring the line of the horse’s neck.

Human skull along the spine

Gustavo Aceves, Mexican sculptor bony addition aids composition
Bony addition aids composition

Gustavo Aceves, Mexican sculptor, Lucca, Italy, sculpture exhibition, public art, horse sculpture, Lapidarium, immigration, migration

Gustavo Aceves, Mexican sculptor, Lucca, Italy, sculpture exhibition, public art, horse sculpture, Lapidarium, immigration, migration


     The blue-green patina (frankly, the easiest to create in bronze, other than black) contrasts nicely with the warm greens of the surrounding grasses and trees.  I think it is in a lovely spot, along the wall of Lucca, where it may be seen from within and down below along the road that circles the wall.  Perhaps you will get to see this exhibit?  Please pardon the big black spot in my pictures.  I need to buy a new camera since this is not-repairable, but I have had a lot of expenses this year and am postponing the shopping.
     Enjoy… I hope not too many photos! 

Happy birthday, Bob Barton!  


Peace,

Kelly Borsheim, artist

P.S. IF original art, while affordable, is STILL a bit out of your budget, or the piece you adored has sold?  Or do you like arty things in different formats, to surround yourself with art?  Looking for a gift?  See my store online for pillow, phone cases, shower curtains, towels, tote bags, and yes, even prints on metal, wood, canvas, and so much more:

bronze horse head public art Lucca, Italy

horse sculpture bronze equine art Lucca Italy

numbers represent people en masse

skull showing the real risk of migration bronze sculpture

Lucca Italy park path along the Medieval wall surrounding the city

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Gustavo Aceves Lapidarium Sculpture



Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Dear Art Lover,
     I found myself in Lucca, Italy, recently, at the invitation of a new friend.  As the bus entered the station at Piazza Verdi, I saw the heads of horses.  They were sculptures and I was intrigued.  Knowing that I was early, I decided to wander over to have a look.  So glad that I did… and later, I even brought my friend over.

     Mexican sculptor Gustavo Aceves has created two massive sculpture works [one a single piece; the other an amazing parade] that is temporarily on exhibit in Lucca [I never saw for how long].  It is titled “Lapidarium,” although the only sign about the work implies the title is “Passo Sospeso” [Suspended Step] I will write about the large bronze horse in the next post.  This post is about the grouping of fifteen horses [the sign says, count if you like] that are exhibited “within” the famous wall around Lucca, in what appears to be a sunken area with arches.  My friend explained that the water and aqueducts passed by those arches behind this sculpture installation.

    I quote part of the sign for this sculpture grouping [I rewrote a little to correct the poor translation to English]:
     These sculptures represent a sort of “monument to the vanquished,” a metaphor of the unceasing migration process over thousands of years.  Part of a larger group, these sculptures travel along to many important sites around the world, such as Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, and an archeological area in Rome (Mercati di Traiano, l’Arco di Costantino e la Piazza del Colosseo).  After this exhibition leaves Lucca, Italy, it will travel on to the Acropolis in Athens, Beijing, and Paris.  In 2019 it will arrive in Mexico, the birthplace of the author.

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art

gate enclosure Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
the gate aids the impact of the message, no?

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art


Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art     The artist has obviously used the same mold to create the horses, the male African-inspired figures that stand atop some of the horses, and I think even the grouping of skulls that line the torsos of the three horses in the rear of the “parade.”  Repetition is a common compositional device.  It gives us a feeling of calm, continuity, cohesion of the separate items as a whole, and sometimes security.  Our brain catches onto the pattern and completes and continues it, feeling good about the order of things.  However, too much repetition creates boredom, precisely for the reason that the brain knows what to expect and needs not look further.  In a large sculpture, such as this grouping, it makes economic sense for the artist to do this as well.  


Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Repetition and Variety

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
One feels the exhaustion and struggle, yet anticipation [standing figures]

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
My apologies for the dark spot in the upper left white on the wall-need a new camera.

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Bus Station at Piazza Verdi is off to the left - wall of Lucca, Italy

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Even the holes on the neck of the fallen horses are repetition
 
     That said,  the artist Gustavo Aceves, has then used other compositional means to break up this repetition.  Each horse is different in content.  Some have been cropped, with only the neck and heads positioned as some of the fallen during the great migration.  The horses still walking are positioned in slightly different angles to imply movement and individuality within the group.  But more importantly, and visually and intellectually stimulating, the bodies of the horses are unique.  Some of the bodies have wooden sticks and even masts or crosses, implying migration by ship.  One shows the famine in the exposed rib cage of a horse.  Some of the horses have large stitching across a leg or a face to imply how the journey wounds and yet, the march continues.  Others have human figures tied to wooden sticks, depicting slavery.  There is one horse that carries the load of horses hooves inside his back/wagon. 

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
The train tracks were another reinforcing visual to the idea

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Powerfully conceived work of public art!

little suspended bodies tied up inside of this horse
little suspended bodies are tied up inside of this horse

larger proportioned figure of corpse in the horse on the right
A much larger proportioned human corpse rests inside the horse on the right

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Horse hooves must be a thing of value, or perhaps they were shoes/metal?


Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art

     Then there are the three figures in the back, obviously made from the same mold as the figure up front, but each individualized with netting and other small details.  They stand upon the necks of headless horses.  The bodies of the horses are made up of many skulls.  The visual language makes an obvious and clear heavy statement and yet the figures are beautiful at the same time.  The materials were not listed for this artwork but the surface texture looks like sand.  There are parts of horses’ faces that imply ceramic, although I think it was more likely colored or painted resin. 

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Do the African figures represent people or more like mast fronts on a ship?
Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Three horse bodies at the rear are made up of human skulls.

     An exhibition of this size is expensive to transport and to install.  However, I loved this work and the placement of it in Lucca.  I am curious how the same sculpture grouping looked and will look in the other cities along this tour.  If you happen to see it anywhere else, please share your images of it with me.

Enjoy.. I hope not too many photos!

Peace,

Kelly Borsheim, artist

P.S. IF original art, while affordable, is STILL a bit out of your budget, or the piece you adored has sold?  Or do you like arty things in different formats, to surround yourself with art?  Looking for a gift?  See my store online for pillow, phone cases, shower curtains, towels, tote bags, and yes, even prints on metal, wood, canvas, and so much more:

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
View from the gate at the bottom

Gustavo Aceves horses migration sculpture exhibition Lapidarium Passo Sospeso Lucca Italy public art
Imagine the quality of images from a GOOD camera!

Saturday, April 15, 2017

Carved Stone in Dripping Springs Texas



Dear Art Lover,
     Phil and Michelle Hoggatt have been friends of mine for many years.  They live and work in Dripping Springs, Texas, with their home-based business called Carved Stone, Inc.  They are such good people and I am thrilled and honored to call them friends.  They create many products for the home (lamps, benches, etc.) from Texas limestone and sometimes other materials. 
     Many years ago they added a sculpture garden, creating a path through the shady parts of their property.  They have hosted many sculpture events and fundraisers for charities and visitors are welcome to stroll the grounds.  I hope that you will go visit some time and even take some of their stone creations into your home.  John and I arrived there late in the evening after we got delayed accidentally in Boerne for several hours, so I do not have any images of the Hoggatt’s lovely gift shop.  

Visit them online at: https://carved-stone.com/

     The bonus for my visit was that they still had a lot of blooming Texas bluebonnets!  I hope you enjoy their nightlights in the garden, as well as my snapshot of the full moon overhead us during our visit.

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas
Sculptures in stone by Phil and Michelle Hoggatt


     If you like, please have a look at some more of my sculpture online here:
Peace,
Kelly
P.S.  Subscribe to the art newsletter here (it is FREE):  http://www.borsheimarts.com/contact.htm

 
Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas
Texas Bluebonnets and limestone Carvings

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas
Bluebonnets and Sculpture - lovely combination!

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas
Full moon over Sculp;ture Garden, Texas

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas
Stone sculptures for sale for your garden, Texas or otherwise

Carved Stone Sculpture Garden Path Hoggatt Family Dripping Springs Texas

Carved limestone and glass lamp outdoor sculpture at dusk, Texas

Carved limestone and glass lamp outdoor sculpture at dusk, Texas


Monday, April 10, 2017

Gemini in Boerne Texas


Dear Art Lover,
     I have been working in Texas for several days now, back in my former studio/home.  Saturday, John and I drove to the re-opening of the new Sculptor’s Dominion large garden sculpture exhibition in the new location in Boerne, Texas. 
     We brought my bronze figure sculpture “Gemini” with us and put her up on a pedestal.  The site is the home of Gilbert E. Barrera, a friend of mine for many years after he traveled from his former home in San Antonio to Austin in order to connect with other sculptors.  He came to the Elisabet Ney Sculpture Conservatory, where I was teaching at the time and where the home of the Texas Society of Sculptors was back in the mid-1990s and early 2000.  And a bunch of us helped him start his dream show.

Gemini bronze sculpture on exhibit in ranch in Boerne Texas Sculptors Dominion Barrera Family

Gemini bronze sculpture on exhibit in ranch in Boerne Texas Sculptors Dominion Barrera Family

     His new location is his family ranch of about 300 acres.  I understand from some of the guests this past weekend that the Barrera family is well-known and respected in San Antonio.  Gilbert’s father is famous and recently turned 90 years old.  He still practices law.  Gilbert has done a lot of work on this property, including restoring an old log cabin from the time of the famous battle at The Alamo.  It is a beautiful location.  The old oak trees are amazing, a personal love of mine. 
      Gilbert exhibits all styles of sculpture and materials that are strong for outdoor display.  You are sure to find something that you enjoy there and hopefully want to add to YOUR garden!  If you find yourself in central Texas, please contact Gilbert for a visit to the Sculptor’s Dominion.  You may reach him on Facebook or by e-mail at gilbertebarrera@gmail.com
     I hope you enjoy the images here, which also show just a few of the many large or really large outdoor sculptures!  

     If you like, please have a look at some more of my sculpture online here:
Peace,
Kelly
P.S.  Subscribe to the art newsletter here (it is FREE):  http://www.borsheimarts.com/contact.htm


Gemini bronze sculpture on exhibit in ranch in Boerne Texas Sculptors Dominion Barrera Family

Gemini bronze sculpture on exhibit in ranch in Boerne Texas Sculptors Dominion Barrera Family

Gemini bronze sculpture on exhibit in ranch in Boerne Texas Sculptors Dominion Barrera Family

Gemini bronze sculpture on exhibit in ranch in Boerne Texas Sculptors Dominion Barrera Family