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Shifting Fences
Oak poles, hazelnut twigs,
manila rope
BinnenArt, international
environmental sculpture symposium, Kevelaer, Germany, 2000
"Like waves
the shifting fences are rolling over the meadow, harmonically arising
from out of the green-brown shades of the ground, their dynamic movement
as it were breaking on the shore. The light colors of manila rope
accentuates the movement of the sculpture as foam would the rolling
waves. When in autumn veils of fog are wafting over the meadow, the
shifting fences seem to glide like boats through white nothingness.
Here blocking the view, there guiding the view and and
then again opening vistas outside the Shifting Fences invite the visitor
to stroll through the spaces created between them and capture him within
their own aura. The fences stand to each other like the wickerwork of a
prehistoric settlement, defining spaces between them which envelop the
visitor in their protective sphere. Nevertheless the enclosure never
takes on a threatening dimension, as the fabric of the high shifting
fences leaves windows, which allow the view to wander outside.
Skillfully the artist relates to the visual axii of the landscape ,
guides the view into the surrounding meadow, frames a singular tree in
one of the vistas or refers the visitor into one of the other spaces
framed by the wall elements.
Not only the organically conceived form, but also the
materials integrate into the surrounding nature. Oak poles and hazelnut
twigs are the materials taken from the very place, into which the artist
forms with their help his sculpture, which turns out to belong it as
though those Shifting Fences had been standing there from the beginning
of times." (quoted from Matthias Grass "when a meadow became a different
kind of meadow", catalogue of the symposium) |
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