Monday, December 5, 2011

Research Statement

This research is focused on Tony Cragg, a British sculptor born in Liverpool and his incredibly unusual abstract works. He was born in 1949, so he is currently in his early 60s and still actively making sculptures. He first studied art on the foundation course at the Gloucestershire College of Art and Design, Cheltenham and then at the Wimbledon School of Art. During that period he was taught by Roger Ackling, who is also a sculptor that makes fascinating abstract sculptures that share a common style. Roger Acking introduced Cragg to Richard Long and Bill Woodrow, who are also advanced sculptors.

He has been influenced and motivated by these sculptors but managed to create an entirely different style than the ones he has been exposed to. His style of sculpture has a touch of classical and modernism, making it unique and have a completely different appeal than what sculpture is usually seen as. Cragg is very visual, he looks in depth at everything and from that brings his inspiration for his sculptures. His works start off as simple preliminary drawings, and through that he figures out the design to make the real project.

In Craggs’ early years he made sculptures using simple techniques such as stacking, splitting, and crushing. In 1978 he collected discarded plastic fragments and arranged them into color categories. Shortly after this he made works on the floor and wall reliefs, which formed images. Then his style switched over to being more modernized in his recent works, but they all still has a distinctive look to it that doesn’t completely categorize it in just the modern. The basis of his work was mainly through abstract observation, to simplify the images that he was seeing to their very basic structure and function.

He uses a variety of different materials which consist of stone, clay, bronze, glass, different synthetic materials like polystyrene, carbon- or glass-fiber. His sensitivity to different materials is and has been the starting point for his work. To a great extent, his choice of material has determined the form, which a sculpture has taken on. I discovered that the material he has chosen for his works gives a wonderful sense of texture that defines the form Cragg is trying to depict very well. The material of his sculptures also exhorts an emotion that is expressed randomly when viewed at different angles.

The focus of my research is getting to understand what Craggs style of sculpture really is in the perspective of the art world. Many people fail to see the true value of abstract art and sculpture simply because it doesn’t have that illusionary effect or that it isn’t recognizable as anything we see in reality. Unfortunately I was one of them. I’ve been pushing my artistic abilities to get the realism I see in life into my artworks, and when I saw abstract sculptures or abstract art work in general it angered me. I didn’t like knowing that these people made something so simple and that is fascinating many people when I bang my head on the desk to make the most complicated thing I can see look like a photograph or a real figure in all its presences just to receive the same or less amount of appreciation. However this ignorance isn’t what should be defining ‘Art’. Art is what people see and how they see it, weather it is something recognizable or not and that is what I aim to present in my research.
             In conclusion, I’ve had an entirely different understanding of art and all its forms through my researching, and I can say with full confidence that I’ve made an incredible discovery in recognizing and appreciating them. It opened a whole new door for me and my work and I feel a great amount of influence from viewing abstract work now than I ever did in the past. I do believe that Tony Craggs artwork has intrigued me especially because there is some complexities present even in his modern sculptures that exhibit basic shapes and that was what lured me to his ever so varied works. Some of his works I did recognize as him trying to be illusionistic much to my understanding. But since he is an artist of many talents, I stumbled across his not so complex abstract works and I was amazed at what I could see after being able to understand his sculptures. I could see what he saw when he was making them, and I want to thank him for being an enormous inspiration of the abstract style and making me see what art can really be.

Cubist Sculpture

Cubist sculpture is a style developed in parallel with cubist painting, centered in Paris, beginning around 1909 and evolving through the early 1920s.
The style is most closely associated with the formal experiments of Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso. Some sources name Picasso's 1909 bronze Head of a Woman as the first cubist sculpture, although art historian Douglas Cooper credits the Czech sculptor Otto Gutfreund (1889–1927).
In either case, others were very quick to follow Braque and Picasso's lead in Paris, artists like Raymond Duchamp-Villon (1876-1918), whose career was cut short by his death in military service, and Alexander Archipenko, who'd arrived in Paris in 1908 and whose 1912 Walking Woman is cited as the first modern sculpture with an abstracted void, i.e., a hole in the middle.
Just as in cubist painting, the style is rooted in Paul Cézanne's reduction of painted objects into component planes and geometric solids (cubes, spheres, cylinders, and cones). According to Herbert Read, this has the effect of "revealing the structure" of the object, or of presenting fragments and facets of the object to be visually interpreted in different ways. Both of these effects transfer to sculpture. The distinction between "analytic cubism" and "synthetic cubism" also holds true in sculpture. "In the analytical Cubism of Picasso and Braque, the definite purpose of the geometricization of the planes is to emphasize the formal structure of the motif represented. In the synthetic Cubism of Juan Gris the definite purpose is to create an effective formal pattern, geometricization being a means to this end." 
By the early 1920s, significant Cubist sculpture had been done in Sweden (by sculptor Bror Hjorth), in Prague (by Gutfreund and his collaborator Emil Filla), and at least two dedicated "Cubo-Futurist" sculptors were on staff at the Soviet art school Vkhutemas in Moscow (Boris Korolev and Vera Mukhina). Other significant cubist sculptors include Jacques Lipchitz and Henri Laurens.
The movement had run its course by about 1925, but cubist approaches to sculpture didn't end as much as they became a pervasive influence, fundamental to the related developments of Constructivism and Futurism.



Reference:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubist_sculpture
http://www.flickriver.com/photos/tags/albertogiacometti/interesting/

Modernism

Modernist sculpture movements include Cubism, Geometric abstraction, De Stijl, Suprematism, Constructivism, Dadaism, Surrealism, Futurism, Formalism Abstract expressionism, Pop-Art, Minimalism, Land art, and Installation art among others

In the early days of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso revolutionized the art of sculpture when he began creating his constructions fashioned by combining disparate objects and materials into one constructed piece of sculpture. Picasso reinvented the art of sculpture with his innovative use of constructing a work in three dimensions with disparate material. Just as collage was a radical development in two dimensional art; so was construction a radical development in three dimensional sculpture. The advent of Surrealism led to things occasionally being described as "sculpture" that would not have been so previously, such as "involuntary sculpture" in several senses, including coulage. In later years Pablo Picasso became a prolific ceramicist and potter, revolutionizing the way Ceramic art is perceived. George E. Ohr and more contemporary sculptors like Peter Voulkos, Kenneth Price, Robert Arneson, and George Segal and others have effectively used ceramics as an important integral medium for their work.

Similarly, the work of Constantin Brâncuşi at the beginning of the century paved the way for later abstract sculpture. In revolt against the naturalism of Rodin and his late 19th century contemporaries, Brâncuşi distilled subjects down to their essences as illustrated by his Bird in Space (1924) series. These elegantly refined forms became synonymous with 20th century sculpture. In 1927, Brâncuşi won a lawsuit against the U.S. customs authorities who attempted to value his sculpture as raw metal. The suit led to legal changes permitting the importation of abstract art free of duty.

Brâncuşi's impact, with his vocabulary of reduction and abstraction, is seen throughout the 1930s and 1940s, and exemplified by artists such as Gaston Lachaise, Sir Jacob Epstein, Henry Moore, Alberto Giacometti, Joan Miró, Julio González, Pablo Serrano, Jacques Lipchitz and later in the century by Carl Andre and John Safer who added motion and monumentality to the theme of purity of line.

Since the 1950s Modernist trends in sculpture both abstract and figurative have dominated the public imagination and the popularity of Modernist sculpture had sidelined the traditional approach. Picasso was commissioned to make a maquette for a huge 50-foot (15 m)-high public sculpture to be built in Chicago, known usually as the Chicago Picasso. He approached the project with a great deal of enthusiasm, designing a sculpture which was ambiguous and somewhat controversial. What the figure represents is not known; it could be a bird, a horse, a woman or a totally abstract shape. The sculpture, one of the most recognizable landmarks in downtown Chicago, was unveiled in 1967. Picasso refused to be paid $100,000 for it, donating it to the people of the city.

During the late 1950s and the 1960s abstract sculptors began experimenting with a wide array of new materials and different approaches to creating their work. Surrealist imagery, anthropomorphic abstraction, new materials and combinations of new energy sources and varied surfaces and objects became characteristic of much new modernist sculpture. Collaborative projects with landscape designers, architects, and landscape architects expanded the outdoor site and contextual integration.

Artists such as Isamu Noguchi, David Smith, Alexander Calder, Jean Tinguely, Richard Lippold, George Rickey, Louise Bourgeois, and Louise Nevelson came to characterize the look of modern sculpture, and the Minimalist works by Tony Smith, Robert Morris, Donald Judd, Larry Bell, Anne Truitt, Giacomo Benevelli, Arnaldo Pomodoro, Richard Serra, Dan Flavin, and others led contemporary abstract sculpture in new directions.

By the 1960s Abstract expressionism, Geometric abstraction and Minimalism predominated. Some works of the period are: the Cubi works of David Smith, and the welded steel works of Sir Anthony Caro, the large scale work of John Chamberlain, and environmental installation scale works by Mark di Suvero.

During the 1960s and 1970s figurative sculpture by modernist artists in stylized forms by artists such as: Leonard Baskin, Ernest Trova, Marisol Escobar, Paul Thek, and Manuel Neri became popular. In the 1980s several artists, among others, exploring figurative sculpture were Robert Graham in a classic articulated style and Fernando Botero bringing his painting's 'oversized figures' into monumental sculptures.



Reference:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sculpture

Materials of sculpture through history


The materials used in sculpture are diverse, changing throughout history. Sculptors have generally sought to produce works of art that are as permanent as possible, working in durable and frequently expensive materials such as bronze and stone: marble, limestone, porphyry, and granite. More rarely, precious materials such as gold, silver, jade, and ivory were used for chryselephantine works. More common and less expensive materials were used for sculpture for wider consumption, including glass, hardwoods (such as oak, box/boxwood, and lime/linden); terracotta and other ceramics, and cast metals such as pewter and zinc (spelter).

Sculptures are often painted, but commonly lose their paint to time, or restorers. Many different painting techniques have been used in making sculpture, including tempera, [oil painting], gilding, house paint, aerosol, enamel and sandblasting.

Many sculptors seek new ways and materials to make art. One of Pablo Picasso's most famous sculptures included bicycle parts. Alexander Calder and other modernists made spectacular use of painted steel. Since the 1960s, acrylics and other plastics have been used as well. Andy Goldsworthy makes his unusually ephemeral sculptures from almost entirely natural materials in natural settings. Some sculpture, such as ice sculpture, sand sculpture, and gas sculpture, is deliberately short-lived. A vast array of sculptors including Joan Miró, Marcel Duchamp, Yves Klein, John Chamberlain, Jean Tinguely, Richard Stankiewicz, Larry Bell, Carl Andre, Louise Bourgeois and others used glass, stained glass, automobile parts, tools, machine parts, and hardware to fashion their works.

Reference:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sculpture

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Preliminary Drawings

A  complete  set  of  project  drawings  consists  of general  drawings,  detail  drawings,  assembly  drawings, and   always   a   bill   of   materials. GENERAL DRAWINGS consist of “plans” (views from above) and elevations  (side  or  front  views)  drawn  on  a  relatively small  defined  scale,  such  as  1/8  in.  =  1  ft  or 1/4 in. =  1 ft. Most of the general drawings are drawn in  orthographic  projections,  though  sometimes  details may be shown in isometric or cavalier projections. A DETAIL DRAWING shows a particular item on a larger scale than that of the general drawing in which the item appears, or it may show an item too small to appear at all  on  a  general  drawing.  An  ASSEMBLY  DRAWING is either an exterior or a sectional view of an object showing  the  details  in  the  proper  relationship  to  one another. Usually, assembly drawings are drawn to a smaller scale than are detail drawings. This procedure provides a check on the accuracy of the design and detail  drawings  and  often  discloses  errors.


Depending  on  the  space  available  on  the  drafting sheet, you may incorporate the BILL OF MATERIALS in the drawing; otherwise, you are to list it on a separate sheet.  The  bill  of  materials  contains  a  list  of  the quantities,  types,  sizes,  and  units  of  the  materials required  to  construct  the  object  presented  in  the drawing. In  a  typical  military  construction,  working  (project) drawings  go  through  stages  of  review  and  evaluation for design and technical adequacy to ensure good quality, consistency,  and  cost  effectiveness  of  the  design.


Preliminary  drawings are the initial plans for projects prepared by the designer or architects and engineers  (A/E)  firm  during  the  early  planning  or promotional  stage  of  the  building  development.  They provide  a  means  of  communication  between  the designer and the user (customer). These drawings are NOT intended to be used for construction, but they are used for exploring design concepts, material selection, preliminary cost estimates, approval by the customer, and a basis for the preparation of finished working drawings.


 You  will  notice  that  most  of  the  design  work incorporated  into  the  preliminary  drawings  at  the 35-percent stage of completion contain, as a minimum, the  following  information:  site  plans,  architectural floor  plans,  elevations,  building  sections,  preliminary finish  schedule  and  furniture  layouts,  interior  and exterior  mechanical  and  electrical  data,  and  civil  and structural  details.






Reference:
http://www.tpub.com/content/engineering/14069/css/14069_322.htm

Cragg on Euromaxx





References:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5XzN0cKNA2Y

Nasher Sculpture Center





Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRCAQ_8srhc&feature=related

Scottish National Gallery of modern art






Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZM8MZNbFFY&feature=relmfu

The Herald: Artist profile

By Sarah Urwin Jones.



One of Britain’s foremost sculptors, Tony Cragg makes monumental sculptures cast in bronze, steel-forged or carved from stone. Metamorphic, allusive, never entirely abstract, his forms might suggest vessels from washing-up bottles to ancient pots or ever-changing human profiles. The emphasis is on the perceptive, subjective aspect of viewing. Everywhere there is the quality of surprise, the sensation one might have looking at a natural form whose deliberateness and sophistication suggest it must, yet can’t, have been created by human hand.




Reference:
http://www.heraldscotland.com/arts-ents/stage-visual-arts/artist-profile-tony-cragg-1.1113553?localLinksEnabled=false

Edinburgh Festival 2011: Tony Cragg interview

By


The afternoon I meet Tony Cragg in a hot upstairs gallery in London’s Bond Street to talk about his new show at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, he has flown over from Germany, where he has lived, in Wuppertal, since 1977. A renowned British sculptor, the 1988 Turner Prize winner and a leading figure in the remarkable generation of sculptors that emerged in the late Seventies, he is also currently director of the respected Kunstakademie, Düsseldorf. He acknowledges that while he settled there largely by accident – he followed his first wife back home – what Germany offered, in the Seventies, besides ample studio space, was “a sense of the necessity of contemporary art”. 

Behind us as we talk, four sculptures stand on plinths. One sleek black bronze, Hollow Head (2008), rises up, a spiral of matter surrounding a void, the shape revealing, as you walk around it, a human face in profile and then revolving once again into abstraction. Another bronze, It is, It isn’t (2010), plays a similar game of hide and seek, at one turn offering smooth amorphous curves, at another a human face. 

The mind locks eagerly onto the profile, and yet the power of these pieces lies in the movement from intriguing mass to recognition. Two further pieces, twisting, interlocking towers of piled matter that seem to dance or writhe like baroque gladiators or lovers in the muted orange of rusted steel, look almost as if they have bored vertically upwards out of the soil. 

It is this conviction of their own necessity that is one of the essential characteristics of Cragg’s work. It is there also in the looping urgent drawings that line the walls and which, alongside watercolours and prints, will also be in Edinburgh. Drawing was Cragg’s first love. But, required to make a sculpture as part of an art foundation course in Cheltenham in 1969, he says: “I very quickly realised that every single change of volume or line or surface actually did give me a different idea, it did give me a different emotion and a different set of associations, and I found that fascinating.” By the time Cragg emerged from the Royal College of Art eight years later, he was a sculptor. 

Since then, he has played obsessively with volume, line and surface, using wood, glass, plastic, bronze, steel, polystyrene, plaster, ceramic and a variety of found materials, and moving in scale from small objets to massive pieces that occupy the landscape. 

What unites all his work is intense curiosity about forms and materials, and the world itself: “These are not at all things that people need for any practical purpose in the world,” he says. “But they do reveal so much for me as I am making them. They offer me a new way to see the world, and that is all I am interested in.” 

This major exhibition, part of the Edinburgh Festival, offers the first full survey of Cragg’s work in Britain for more than a decade, and runs in a year that will also see shows in Venice, Duisburg, Paris and Dallas. Featuring nearly 50 major sculptures, and using the grounds to display work too large for the main exhibition rooms, the show is focused on work from the past 15 years, with some earlier pieces. 

Cragg’s early work was influenced by Minimalism and Conceptualism. It often involved site-specific installation and performance. Stack (1975), the startling cube he made from layers of mixed materials, and which looked so convincing in the RA’s recent Modern British Sculpture show, was a notable exception.

In the early Eighties, he changed tack decisively: “I very often ended up with some material or with some kind of an object and I would wonder what would happen if I spent more time in the studio with this.” He bought a bigger studio, a former tank repair garage in Wuppertal, got some technical help and began making discrete objects. 

Two significant strands of work have sustained his production ever since: Early Forms and Rational Beings. The Rational Beings are those spiralling almost-faces. Early Forms are born of Cragg’s conviction that the sculptor’s role is “to make the things that aren’t there. There is no point in copying what is there – the role of art is to open a door onto other realities.” Haunted by the idea of all the extinct creatures which lie between those we see, he makes brilliantly coloured hybrid vessels and creatures, challenges to “the simple, flat and boring” homogenised, industrial world we inhabit. 

Everything he does, unusually for a major contemporary sculptor, has its origin in hands-on making: “You play around with the material, looking for a form, and suddenly you find forms that say more than you had thought possible, and that is creation, that is poetry.”






Scottish National Gallery Review by Richard Dorment


In the1980s, Tony Cragg’s colourful arrangements of found objects had something of Pop art’s trashy aesthetic and instant visual appeal. Collaging bits of plastic bottles and battered frisbees into representational wall reliefs, he took the detritus of a throwaway society, detached it from its original function, and recycled it as art. 

Then in the middle of that decade, Cragg began to work in bronze, an unfashionable material associated with the inertia of monumental public sculpture. Coming at the very moment when younger British artists were beginning to make work with dead sharks, human blood and cigarettes, his move away from assemblage towards a material freighted with art-historical baggage could well have made Cragg look antediluvian. 

But as a show at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art reveals, over the last 20 years Cragg not only faced the challenge but revelled in it, making bronzes that weigh many tons, and yet look as though they’d been freed from the laws of gravity and inertia, zigzagging giddily upwards, as vertiginous in their verticality as Brancusi’s Endless Column.

In these amazing sculptures Cragg appears at times to be engaging in a private conversation with the great masters of early 20th-century sculpture. As you move around a tower of elliptically shaped plates, the outlines turn into profiles of human faces just as happens in that icon of modernist sculpture, Renato Bertelli ’s 1933 Continuous Profile (Head of Mussolini), while in Runner (2010) Cragg is clearly riffing on the moving figure in Umberto Boccioni’s famous Unique Forms of Continuity in Space from 1913. In each case he takes a work that is already dynamic and torques it, gives it an extra spin, speeds it up. 

Cragg is also a dab hand at setting up expectations and then refusing to do what we expect him to do. This is as true of individual sculptures as it is of Cragg’s entire career. In Bend of Mind, for example, you assume that the distinct profile you see from one side will vanish as you circle round the sculpture. Instead, the opposite happens and the profile you started with gradually turns into a full face.

And what Cragg does in bronze he’ll sometimes vary in wood or metal, or else pursue entirely different trains of thought in ceramic or fibreglass. He even returns to assemblage: a two-part piece consisting of a wooden workman’s bench and what looks like an anthropoid shape crawling on the floor beside it he renders both repellent and sinister by encrusting the entire surface with scores of screw-hooks, as though it has erupted in a painful disease of the skin. 

And some pieces are so eccentric they appear to be one-offs, or happy accidents. I still can’t figure out what in art history might have inspired the scale model of a gothic cathedral made of red ceramic entitled Small Church. The building lies on its head like a plane that’s crashed nose first on the ground. With both its steeple and “spine” (the nave) crushed, its flying buttresses lie exposed like the rib cage of some prehistoric animal. 

Cragg’s sculptures refuse to be categorised. Once you engage with one, it’s hard to pull yourself away. He is inexhaustible. Against stiff competition from Anish Kapoor, Richard Deacon, Richard Long, and Richard Wentworth, he is the most significant British sculptor of his generation. 




Reference: 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/theatre/edinburgh-festival-reviews/8690554/Edinburgh-Festival-2011-Tony-Cragg-Scottish-National-GalleryHiroshi-Sugimoto-Dean-Gallery-Robert-Rauschenberg-Inverleith-House-review.html

Website

Tony Craggs' website:

http://www.tony-cragg.com/

In Celebration of Sculpture





Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBUARczjXPM&feature=related

Rational Beings Exhibition Interview




Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIrs9DJ8cE0

Lisson Gallery







Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6NzIUaF96w

Interview by Jon Wood


Jon Wood met up with Tony Cragg in Sweden this summer to talk with him about the
exhibition and about some of the thinking behind his recent sculpture.

Tony Cragg: We've been planning this exhibition for about two or three years and, at
the beginning, I thought I'd do a whole show about Rational Beings. But more
recently, since the work has developed in the last eighteen months, I decided it would
be much more interesting to show the ways in which Rational Beings have been
approached via Early Forms. So that's the main function of the exhibition really for
me: to show the synthetic relationship between these bodies of work. I realised that
that would be quite a lot for one room but, it should function especially in such a
large, well-proportioned room, which gives the work a great deal of monumentality.
And so my idea was to populate this space with these sculptures.

Jon Wood: I want to ask you about this fascination of yours with grouping bodies of
work into family units and seeing familial connections between them. Can you
elaborate upon this and say why you choose this kind of language to describe them?

TC: I think it probably began when I was an art student, when most of my attitudes to
sculpture making first developed. I have always had an aversion to the idea of making
series of things. It's just one of those terms that never appealed to me. It has some
negative connotations that have something to do with unnecessary repetitiveness. You
can't start with 'point zero' every time you make a work, you start from the point you
left off through the last work, on the whole...and you may, in fact, start at another
point that goes back a few works earlier. But generally you use the information you've
gleaned out of recent sculpture making activities, and transfer it into the new works,
so there's a sort of ‘stepping forward’ going on as well. It is a bit like following a
thread, almost like a melody in the form, so that sculptures not only have some highly
synthetic quality, but they would also become more synchronic.
Over time, however, there are passages in the work that need to be distinguished from
one another. It becomes necessary for me to keep them apart in my mind, and so
every now and again, without forcing it, a mental tag crops up in my mind (as
indicated with Early Forms and Rational Beings). These become 'species' of work and
so we get sculptures belonging to a certain family, and then there are other families,
and then there are relationships between these families etc..., and I think this has
happened quite naturally. Firstly, it's convenient for me and, secondly, it's possibly the
way the world just developed biologically anyway: from simple cells developing into
more complicated, specialised forms.

JW: What happens when it comes to bronze casts? Do you see them as an edition, a
kind of series, or as another version altogether?

TC: They're versions. Bronze casting is a making technique that is very valuable
because it solidifies forms making them permanent, or relatively permanent. It is a
good way of fixing forms in bronze and a good way of reproducing them, but they're
never quite the same. There are versions that are very different in terms of their patina
and through the ways their surfaces have been worked on. I've never made a group of
more than six sculptures anyway, and they were smaller works. There's not been a
necessity to make a lot of versions of the same sculpture.

JW: Although they end up in bronze, where does the process of making an ‘Early
Form’ begin?

TC: Early Forms start with vessels that will then transform into one another. I start
with a cross-sectional image of the vessel, made in wood, and then I place these
image-templates next to each other and so they seem to move through into one
another. The volumes between the templates have to be filled out with a material like
polystyrene or plaster and then the form has to be carved so that the form and the
migrations of the volumes become clear. Then the surfaces have to be worked, and the
ends finished, so that the vessel ends in a half volume of itself.

JW: What kind of vessels do you like to use?

TC: The first Early Forms I made were based on chemical flasks, which I found
interesting because they were very pragmatic, rational forms which had been
developed out of their alchemical origins. In the sculptures I made, all the vessels
were either standing or lying on the floor (they aren't flying, or up in the air or
anything) and so they had clear relationship to the floor. Then after these early pieces
it was a case of looking for different vessels to see what they could do, and then of
mixing up industrial vessels with archaic ones - mixing ancient forms with functional
forms like jam jars - so that somehow the forms also seemed to mix up time, in a
sense. In the first works the vessels tended to be of a similar size, but in other works,
some templates were much bigger than others, so the final thing looked very organic,
with bulbous growth or with entrails protruding. This development became overly
organic from my point of view, so I decided to cut it right back down so that there
would be an exterior volume, like a cylinder or rod, and then fit the movements of the
vessels into that arrangement, as is the case with Rod and Cancan.

JW: Are the transformations between vessels you've described conducted intuitively
by hand or do you also use computers?

TC: These works are not realities, they're fictions. They're my own fantasy and the
basis for them is my emotion about the form I'm making. When I started making them
in the middle of the 1980s, it probably wouldn't have been possible to compute them.
In fact, it was a man called Charles Hirsch from the university in Brussels, who
actually offered to try and compute them, and there wasn't then an adequate
programme to compute the morphology of a form and then to cat-scan the sections in
order to manufacture it. Nowadays that's very easy technology, and there are lots of
programmes through which you can actually move the form onto the other.
When I started to make the works I call Rational Beings there were other reasons for
calculating the basic geometric forms which are at the root of these works. Obviously,
it was very easy to make circles - you don't need a computer, you can just use a big
compass - but I then decided that I was going to use ovals or ellipses. I could see that
it was much easier to calculate an ellipse on a computer than it was to work it out in
any other way, so it became very valuable. So now I'm using a computer to actually
stretch the templates of the work that I'm doing, but at the same time it's really just
like using a tool, an adequate tool, to make the thing I want to make. The templates
evolve out of drawings and once I have the templates, then I still have a lot of my own
subjective work to do: to work out how I feel about the volume or the silhouette, the
outline, the form or the surface etc...and those are things that one couldn't even start to
compute.

JW: More generally, do you think that digital imaging has impacted greatly upon
sculpture’s possibilities?

I think now is actually an interesting point in time because, in a sense, whatever
photography was for painting in the middle of the nineteenth century, computers
might be for sculpture today. It's worth considering, because all painting after the
advent of photography is either based on photography or based on the reaction against
photography, so it's as if having a photographic image somehow alleviates the artist of
the necessity of having certain skills. In terms of sculpture, it's more difficult to
represent things in three dimensions, and it's taken a hundred and fifty years to have
an equivalent facility to make, or to facilitate the making of a three-dimensional form.
It's so new that one can't talk about it bringing memory with it, because the account of
the thing we're looking at still isn't old enough. We're not at the point yet that we're
using automatic form-making technology for the sake of memory.
It's definitely going to open up a lot of new possibilities, but the first problem is that
in the same way we’re talking about photographic imagery in terms of bits and bytes,
35mm, 6mm, black and white, kodachrome, ektachrome and all that sort of stuff and
in doing that formatting picture making. We're dealing with a formatted reality, that is
already there in picture-making and this is becoming a very dominating phenomenon
and this could well apply to sculpture making soon. The dominance of photographic
imagery brings with it today the crushing out of the possibility of making new images
and impoverishes the visual language. So the quest for me now is to get away from a
formatted reality, reality as made by industrial systems, whether it's a two-by-one
piece of wood or whether it's a pixel.
If you're looking at welded steel sculpture of the fifties, you're still only looking at
works that are made accumulatively out of industrial material and in an industrial
format. So you're using that industrial format, which is utilitarian reality. We're back
to the same point, of blinding and limiting our reality, and so I wonder if the danger of
using sophisticated computer tools for making sculpture is that we might end up with
the same thing. There is a real danger of formatting things like sculpture, because
formatisation is an expedient of the utilitarian production systems which produce the
whole of the boring sub-standard industrial reality around us.

JW: So with this high level of awareness of this pre-formatted reality we all live in,
are you a sculptor who has constantly been trying to work beyond the pre-existent?

TC: Absolutely. I mean, when you walk down the street, and you look at the world
around us, everything you see is made from industrial manufacturing systems.
Utilitarianism is the biggest censor on our reality because only useful things actually
survive.
It's not just a matter of the forms, it's also operative on a layer underneath form, in the
substance and it's there that we find the format driving things. Industrial systems have
already formatted material to such an enormous degree. The sculptor doesn't want to
end up making useful things, because he's trying to make forms that will exist outside
of this limited utilitarian censored reality. The sculptor has got to get away from
format, and that's one of the great things about using clay. It is a route to setting up a
sculptural alternative to the industrial utilitarian reality. If you use plywood you've got
to completely pervert it, in a sense, because otherwise it's just going to be like
plywood. Obviously you can use those materials, but you have to make them do
things they weren't intended to do, and use them for things that they weren't supposed
to be doing.

JW: So what kinds of things does a sculptor like you want to make?

TC: Well, when you see a room like this, full of objects, everything you're looking at
is a kind of high peak of reality, and there's a word attached to each peak: 'saw',
'hammer', 'chair', 'table', 'bicycle', 'bag' etc...The things we see here in this room are
kinds of hybrids of what's necessary, but there are thousands and thousands of other
forms that don't yet exist. These could also be valuable, and they are valuable,
because they still could provide meaning, they could still be used as metaphors, they
could still be used as language, and they could still be used in thoughts and fantasies
and dreams, and so on...and those freedoms that they represent are basically still in
our head, and the best way to use our head is to have a great language to work in. And
so I think that to improve the visual language that you are working with is what
sculptors want to do.

JW: You have described the visual language of your 'Rational Beings' as having an
‘emotional vocabulary’, can you elaborate on this?

TC: By emotional vocabulary I mean how you actually feel about forms: how you
look at them and have certain emotions. You can work through forms, and working
through the form, you can develop any part of the language as well....and so I started
introducing profiles - human profiles, readable profiles - into the silhouette of the
works. That was important for me because there's obviously enormous emotional
baggage that comes with being able to read that subtle anthropomorphic quality. I
always thought that it was erroneous to think of them as portraits, I mean they're not
portraits. We have an ability to look at a cloud and see a face, or we look into some
vegetation and see a face, because we have this enormous facility to recognise profiles
and faces, so it's almost inevitable that when there are no faces to look at, our brain is
revving all the time, looking for parameters for two eyes, and a nose, and a mouth,
and some ears. Alongside that we can recognise millions of different faces, without
ever mixing them up.
However, I would like to think that my Rational Being sculpture works in a different
way, in the reverse of that, so that you look at the work, and you see a face, and in
seeing the face, it leads you to look into the material and then look at the other forms.
And, the minute you look back into the form, away from the profile and into the
surface of the work, you step away from the normal, axial view of the work and you
start to have ‘extra-ordinary’ experiences of sculptural volumes.

JW: Perhaps I can end by asking you about such sculptural experiences - for those
walking around the sculptures on display in Nuremberg?

TC: There's an idea that sculpture is something solid and static, and that it's a frozen
moment of time, it's like the sculpture is a memory in its own way. Sculpture is
relatively solid, for the main part, but so is our everyday material reality.
None of these things were here, in this room last week, we weren't here, an hour ago,
and this building wasn't here three years ago, and the road wasn't here twenty years
ago, and every year there's been a new crop and new vegetation...and so although the
world looks very solid, actually it's incomplete - it's totally flowing the whole time.
However, looking at sculpture somehow the world can suddenly fix up again. Yet,
what I think is important for me is something different: a sculptural quality that
doesn't emulate time. It's not a futurist concern which shows the path of a slice of time
or of some emotion. It's not showing motion, but there is a passage in it that's relevant,
so that the form has a beginning, and it has an end, and it has an in-between, so there
is some sense of passage, there is a sense of flow, there is an intuition of flow in the
sculpture.
I do like a certain sense of fluidity in the work and in doing this exhibition, in
particular, I would like to achieve the sense that this population of sculptures, which
are now moved into the gallery, are also in a kind of fluid state. The way I work and
the energy I try to get into making things - making that work and the next and then the
next - is to somehow to develop a sense of flow in the wider body of my own work. In
a sense, an exhibition is just an opportunity to see what it all looks like from outside,
just so that I can see the work flow over the last year, the last five years, the last ten
years etc.. and feel the passage of that time. I'd like to use the opportunity of this
exhibition to stage a ‘family get-together’ of Rational Beings and the Early Forms.
Maybe there might be some cross-pollination, perhaps in terms of form and definitely
in terms of their content and feeling...

JW: And for viewers walking around the works, looking across early work and later
work, what would you like them to take away with them?

TC: I just want to give them an alternative: an alternative to looking at nature, and an
alternative to looking at a dull-headed industrial utilitarian reality. Every sculptor
wants to give you an alternative to looking at nature. You know nature is wonderful
and interesting, and will be the source of everything, but ultimately, as sculptors, we
have to express ourselves on our own terms.



Reference:
http://www.tony-cragg.com/texte/Tony%20Cragg%20interviewed%20by%20Jon%20Wood.pdf