ART

Arthur Ganson, Thinking Chair (detai/1), painted wood/mixed media,
26 x 30 x 30". Photo: Chehalis Hegner.
New
Movements in Kinetic
Sculpture
GWENDOLYN HOLBROW
Arthur Ganson planned to become a
surgeon, but somewhere along the pre-med path he took a detour onto the road
less traveled. Today, instead of scalpels and forceps, he wields pliers and
welding torches, and the towers of boxes stacked in his gritty industrial
studio have labels like Springs, Doll Parts, Air Hose,
Webbing, Dried Leaves, Bronze Bushings, and Miscellaneous Wire Parts. Over the
past thirty years, Ganson has developed this
assortment into a personal vocabulary of sprockets and pulleys, crankshafts and
levers, from which he creates elegant and witty mechanical art. Ganson's work owes a debt to the young Alexander Calder.
Though best known for inventing the mobile around 1930, Calder made his first
kinetic pieces for his miniature circus, Cirque Calder, in
According to Ganson, these pieces
are expressions of his own emotions and experience. "Everything's a
self-portrait, right?" he says. But he is not trying to bring some- thing
inanimate to life. "1 don't want to pretend that
these are anything but little bits of metal. This is not magic," Ganson states firmly, adding, "It could be that the
little chair is the puppet and the mechanics is the puppeteer."
Pat Keck, on the other hand, is a con- temporary Geppetto, deliberately bringing her puppets to life. Her
studio holds row upon row of chisels and rasps, hammers, saws, and lathes.
Wooden heads of all sizes line the shelves like visitors from
Keck herself. They turn over an
hourglass, walk in their sleep, play musical instruments, and watch you through
their glass eyes.
It was the early death of punk per- former and countertenor
Klaus Nomi that inspired Keck's first animated figure. "I so [much] did
not want him to have died, that it occurred to me that I should resurrect
him," says Keck. "It was actually like trying to raise the
dead." And she did exactly that, creating a life-sized reclining figure of
Nomi, painted black and white, that could sit up and
lie down. Nomi's aesthetic, a theatrical cross between Kabuki and carnival,
continues to inform Keck's own.
Keck's most recent body of work, on view this summer at the
Genovese /

Pat Keck, Spinning
Sleeping, painted wood/mixed media, 1994.
"You think you have control over what happens, but
there are so many things you have no control over." Back in the 1980s, the
World Sculpture Racing Society held kinetic sculpture races in
As Calder and the Dadaists and surrealists added movement to
sculpture in Paris, the constructivists were doing the same in Moscow and
Berlin, but with a more industrial and architectural approach. The next
generation of kinetic sculpture, including the self-annihilating machines of
Swiss sculptor Jean Tinguely and the geo- metrically
engineered abstract forms of it.

Anne
Lilly, There's a Certain Slant of Light, -stainless steel, 23 x 12 x 12",
2007. Courtesy
of Anne Lilly. Photo: Peter Harris.
interesting to me is getting
emptiness and matter kind of laced through each other.
There has to be matter to have motion." And unlike most
kinetic sculptors, Lilly may begin by creating a structure to see how it moves,
rather than imagining an outcome and working to manifest it. Not always,
though: "I had a desire to see something expanding and contracting-
something that would give me this swelling," she says, which resulted in
her current body of work.
Although Lilly focuses on negative space and employs austere
geometric
Slender steel rods define planes and volumes, which silently
sway, expand, contract, and pass through each other. The motion is reminiscent
of surface patterns on water, swaying tentacles, or a meadow in the wind.
American George Rickey, moved closer to the mechanical
constructivist aesthetic. Anne Lilly's sculpture draws more upon this tradition.
Her sleek futuristic creations in brushed stainless steel produce complex
movements from precisely machined, yet simply shaped, cylinders, rods, and
gears. "There are almost no forms; it's just lines," she says.
"What's forms and industrial material, the objects execute astonishingly
graceful organic gestures. Slender steel rods define planes and volumes, which
silently sway, expand, con tract, and pass through each other. The motion is
reminiscent of surface patterns on water, swaying tentacles, or a meadow in the
wind. Lilly calls her process "finding a system that results
in its own choreography." The viewer supplies the power by rotating the
base or geared cylinders, which Lilly considers vital. "You can feel the mechanics,
feel the piece responding," she explains. "I think people are really
starved for physical experience."

Steve Hollinger, Kwajalein, mixed-media sculpture (responds to sunlight). 18 x 12 x 10", 2006. Courtesy of
Steve Hollinger prefers to detach his work from the viewer.
Moving parts are enclosed in vintage wooden explosives boxes, blocks of concrete,
or glass cases, and powered by sunlight. "I want to create a sense of
independence, and, in quite a few cases, a sense of isolation, where the piece
could live on its own without reliance on someone pushing a button," he
explains. "The solar power allows me to disconnect the piece from the
viewer and the world. It gives it life." And his fascination is with time,
rather than space. "I've read other kinetic sculptors were interested in
space, and movement through space, and so on, and that's not something that I
think about too much," he says. "Mostly I think time, and
transformation or change." Some of Hollinger's boxes, containing a elaborate rotating flipbooks or wheels of images with
strobe lights, were on display last spring in the Picture Show -at the
Far out on the performance end of the kinetic art spectrum,
with clear ties to Dada, is the Musee Patamecanique. Patamechanics, according
to curator Neil Salley, is a syzygy between science and art, which is also an
accurate description of kinetic sculpture as a whole. Like Hollinger's work,
the Musee is contained in a box, but in this case the box is a
his- toric building and both artist and
visitor are actually inside. The motive power is supplied primarily by the
exertions of the curator himself, with a little help from the viewer, who must
vigorously turn a large crank to initiate the process.

Ezekiel Borges Plateau,
The Crank-O-Wank, - Bicycle wheels, bells, Film winder, electrical components, 60
x 24 x 5, 2007.
Before conducting the tour, Salley inquires, "Have you
any aversions to stroboscopic lights? Foul odors? Loud
sounds?" Once inside, the visitor encounters all of the above, plus
an oracle, a time machine, and other kinetic works. Close collaborator Hans Spinnerman's Dream of Timmy Bumblebee, a Patamechanical
apparatus that extracts the dreams of bees and displays them in glass jars, is
the most intriguing individual piece. A genuine gesamtkunst-
werk [masterpiece of art], the Musee stimulates the
five traditional senses plus several more: the sense of proprioception,
the sense of wonder, and the sense of fun.
Gwendolyn
Holbrow is a sculptor, installation artist, and
writer living in Framingham, MA.
She has been writing about visual art in
August/September 2007 ART