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Docklands Sculpture
From the Top
‘Continuum’
It’s a slow climb. We can, after all, afford to aspire, in
the effort and strain there is ease and humanity, life and pleasure.
Reaching up is not inevitably flawed. We lift each
other. We stride ahead and fall behind, and all of it is all of everything
we are.
We can, in the quest, conceive a level playing
field and know the height is more mirage. With the view we see the
world is flat.
The figures are mostly separately identified. From
nearby and underneath, we see the features; the rise and fall of flesh
and muscle strain. Hair
and face and brushing past and brushed aside.
From further off, the figures give way to community.
The scrum, the huddle, succumb to rhythm’s brace. As we walk
past or drive, the shapes move past each other and interact again.
Seeing through the figures is
a flicker of sky, trees and edifice.
The column, the ‘Colimb’, is what we
are and what we do and what we look through too. It is, as much as
what it undermines. Its strength
is pushed and teased; is opened till the engineers are short of breath.
That was written at conception stage. On reflection,
I was as short of breath as the engineers would later become. For me
however, it is an
inevitable part of the process of stimulation, motivation and inspiration.
The life of a sculpture goes through a number of changes
on the way to execution. Initially it resides in the mind of the maker.
What if and
what if are hopeless goals; a world of barriers lie ahead and final execution
is an eternity away.
I have made large sculptures before, but this sculpture
was beyond my scope to undertake in the studio. My task was to somehow
make my loss
of complete control work for the sculpture. Prior to completion, I am
confident that the spirit of the work has been maintained and amplified.
The life of any sculpture is fraught. From conception
to execution presents a challenge. Anticipating the happy relationship
between the site and
the finished sculpture is something again. Is the colour right? Will
it work in terms of scale and context? Despite my knowledge and experience
of these issues one can never predict the nuances of a site. One goes
by intuition and knowledge and also good fortune. Even an atheist has
to trust the gods are with him.
These cut-out sculptures of mine work well with a clear
uninterrupted backdrop. They also work when they are back-dropped by
other cut-outs.
This produces a meshing and density; the eye is invited to work, to disentangle
to find the image, the figure.
In the case of ‘Configuration’, we find
a blend of the two effects. The meshing however, can be parted, by walking
between the two
halves. Like a puzzle from the newspaper, we compare them. How do they
vary and what effect does that variance have?
In my first thoughts for this work I sought a context
in which the figures would intereact. They would not be unified by race,
age or
issue. They
were not overtly fighting or loving. They were not bound by ideology
or religion. To what purpose might the figures find themselves together?
I have sought to create a sense of happy emptiness;
of calm and even silence; of an ease of being together without condition
or expectation.
These qualities have lent the figures the shapes they make. While
this was my intention, time will disclose the extent of my vanity.
At any
rate, this was my thinking.
I hope that Melbourne and The Docklands in particular
enjoy the work as much as I found pleasure in making it, or at least
realizing
it.
Michael Snape
© Michael Snape 1973-2008
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