A Kingdom of Precipitous Peaks
By Tom Wachunas
EXHIBIT: Unorganized Territories – Sculpture by Mark Schatz, at Main Hall
Gallery, Kent State University at Stark, 6000 Frank Avenue NW, North Canton,
OH, THROUGH MAY 4 / Viewing hours
Mon.-Fri. 11 AM to 5 PM, Sat. 10 AM-Noon
“…I
try to evoke something deeply familiar in surprising ways. I acknowledge and even relish the
fragmentation, distortion, and reinvention of our remembered places.” –
Mark Schatz
Some materials and
methods of assembly do indeed have an innate capacity to awaken memories or
invite storytelling. The several untitled sculptures that comprise this airy
installation by Mark Schatz (Assistant Professor and Foundation Program
Coordinator for the School of Art at Kent State University, Main Campus)
instantly transported me to my childhood train set. At its most “magnificent,”
it sprawled across a few crude, rickety tables in the basement, piled high with
hand-painted papier-maché mountains, popsicle stick buildings and erector set
bridges. Architecturally unsophisticated and unreasonable to be sure, it was
still my world, manifesting an
exuberant desire (or maybe compulsion?) to construct a fantasy kingdom.
Likewise, you
might call Mr. Schatz’s installation a corrugated kingdom, conjuring unusual
living habitats along Lilliputian longitudes. His meticulously laminated and
cut cardboard forms evoke the eerie columns of eroded rock strata called earth
pyramids, fairy chimneys, or hoodoos, carved through eons of geologic change,
located in various arid terrains around our planet.
On the face of it, the thought of building a
home atop such formations is purely unreasonable. An absurd foundation for a
place to live. Seeing the idea as a symbol, however, is an entirely different
exercise. By crowning the pinnacles of his isolated tapered towers – some of
them leaning precariously - with little models of unfinished wood frame houses,
like so many hermitages, Schatz invests his forms with a surreal whimsicality
that nonetheless leaves generous room for building a personal narrative.
You could begin by
considering the idea of corrugated cardboard itself – its physical design and
functions - and the associations that
come with it, such as storage, stacking, mobility, unpacking, impermanence.
Look closely at the nature of the material and the variations that happen
between all those layers of tiny, alternating curved ridges and grooves – the
irregular gaps that can suggest tunnels or caves, or corridors to the other side
of the mountain, as it were.
Further, there’s
the idea of some sort of pre-set plan or control for the laborious cutting and
accumulating of individual planes that progressively lessen in area as the
towers ascend to their narrow peaks. Accidents and/or mistaken calculations
come with the territory.
So maybe it’s not
so unreasonable to regard these forms as representing adaptation to
unpredictability, or as allegories of a process for embracing change. Both
dangerous and thrilling, here’s a delightfully entertaining kingdom symbolizing
all those places and times where serendipity might rule.
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