Beth Carter “DANCING WITH MORPHEUS” : Feb 6 – March 8, 2014

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BETH CARTER

DANCING WITH MORPHEUS

bdgny.com

cover | Antler Figure 60” x 21” x 21” - Bronze

opposite | Man with Dog 36” x 12” x 9” - Bronze

above | Traveling Shoes 3” x 5” x 7½” - Bronze


Giant Standing Minotaur 77” x 22” x 23” - Resin | 3


4 |

Flying Figure 60” x 36” x 24” - Bronze | 5


6 | Lion and Unicorn 30” x 23” - Charcoal and Pastel on Paper

Dreaming King

55” x 16½” x 11”- Resin | 7


8 | Monkey and Hare 30” x 25” x 31” - Bronze

Fox and Pheasant 28” x 9½” x 7”- Bronze | 9


10 | Bull and Rider 22” x 13” x 6” - Resin

Mr. Doubledream 31½” x 9½” x 9” - Bronze | 11


12 | Leading the Giant 22½” x 7½” x 11” - Bronze

The Day Owl 50” x 38½” - Charcoal and Pastel on Paper | 13


B E T H C A RT E R Beth Carter’s sculptures, deeply rooted in mythology, are part of a genre the artist describes as “magical realism.” There is something peculiar and enchanting about her menagerie of minotaurs, winged creatures and half-human forms. Carter first crafts her sculptures out of clay or wax and consequently casts them into limited edition works in bronze or resin. She emphasizes that her art is conceived in a deeply internal and contemplative place; it requires a large emotional investment from her and this raw sensitivity is evident in her works. Carter frequently accomplishes a rare feat in capturing grief, vulnerability, whimsy and magic in one piece. Her works often explore the nature of duality; whether it is the relationship between beasts and humankind, vulnerability and power or the real and the imagined, the artist cleverly juxtaposes conflicting ideas that the viewer, alone, must reconcile. The distinct sense of melancholy present in Carter’s art allows her creatures to be at once physically imposing and emotionally vulnerable. Her series of thoughtful drawings in charcoal and conté demonstrate this same interior need to explore sadness and the subconscious. Carter’s unique body of work creates an alternate reality – one that invites the viewer to partake in a journey to a strange, dreamlike world where the lines between man and beast, reality and the subconscious and the possible and impossible are no longer clear. Beth Carter received her degree in Fine Art from Sunderland University in the United Kingdom. In 1995, she was awarded 1st prize in the Northern Graduate Show ‘95 at The Royal College of Art, London. Afterwards, she traveled to Sri Lanka, India, New Zealand, Mexico, Gambia, Kenya and Tanzania to study mythological sculpture; she plays with these classical precedents to create a new genre that is all her own. Her work has been shown in the US and abroad and appears in private collections throughout Europe, Asia and the US.

14 | Horsechild 37½” x 21¼” x 11” - Resin and Red Pigment

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18 | The Conjuror’s Horse 46” x 40” - Charcoal and Pastel on Paper

Free Reign 32” x 22” x 14” - Resin | 19


20 | Standing Horse 17¾” x 5” x 4¾” - Bronze

Kneeling Horse 47” x 19¾” x 23½”- Resin | 21


22 | Crowmask II 11½” x 14” x 7”- Bronze

Messenger 19½” x 10¼” x 9½” - Bronze | 23


24 | Day Dreamer 34” x 9½” x 9½” - Bronze

Wolf with Deer 28” x 11” x 9” - Bronze | 25


26 | Cat and Pigeon 37½” x 22” x 12½” - Resin

back cover | New York, West Broadway 39¼” x 31½”

Sleeping Dog 45” x 17½” x 24½” - Bronze | 27


28 | Minotaur and Bird 70” x 60” - Charcoal and Pastel on Paper

Minotaur on Box 22” x 15¾” x 11” - Bronze | 29


R E V E L AT I O N S O F T H E

R E A D I N G M I N OTA U R The hunch is a gesture of many implications. Free from culture and cohort, hunching over can indicate shame, coyness, and introversion. The curtailed gesture may also be an expression of anticipation, of waiting to jump up and aggrandize oneself. Beth Carter’s sculpture, the Reading Minotaur, falls somewhere in the middle of this continuum. In a bronze state, he sits with his legs curiously dangling and his back hunched over as his bull-head overlooks a tiny book in his hands. At the Gallery, one of the Minotaur’s many homes, he is discernibly admired by the public –indicated especially by his tendency to be taken home by seasoned and first-time art buyers alike. The Reading Minotaur’s posture and size incite neither fear nor intimidation, but to coo at him the way one does at a puppy would be condescending; and his crouch of introversion may turn into a crouch of anticipation. Let the myths remind us that he has killed in the past. The public respectfully endears him and those who procure him look forward to adorning their homes with two unlike qualities all people admire but cannot seem to find in the same entity: warm curious unobtrusiveness and unmistakable power. After all, Fraser Kee Scott once described the Reading Minotaur as, “he who crushed a king… devour[ing] a book instead.” I once asked a soft-spoken elderly woman her opinion regarding what it is that the Minotaur is reading. She imparted, in so many words: “The Bible, of course.” Dante claimed the Minotaur was damned for his violent nature; this woman believes he is mitigating that fate. After all, why would a gentlewoman want a murderer that has not restituted his past in her presence? That same day, a young man walked into the Gallery straight from his financial firm, and fresh from Wharton, and told me that the Minotaur was reading Machiavelli’s The Prince. This is a feasible conjecture, since the myths claim the Minotaur has eaten kings. This young baron must have seen a bit of himself in the Minotaur. However, the most affixing notion is not from a lived older woman or from a well-read professional, but from a child. “It’s a picture book with no words,” the youngest member of a visiting Japanese family claimed. “He can’t read. He has a bull brain.” Touché. After all, it is his head that is of a bull and his body that is human, not the other way around. After the child and I spent more time with the Reading Minotaur, I started to understand why the first two visitors were off beam: If the Minotaur had no natural source of nourishment, he did not devour man out of calculation nor evil, but out of survival. So it seems the miniscule book in his resin hands is as revelatory as his pose. People love the Reading Minotaur. He is enough of a human that we understand his body language, but unlike us enough that he can transfigure as common and familiar a gesture as the hunch. What makes him special though is that not only is he captivating, but constantly adopted by a variety of people. The public’s endearment of the Reading Minotaur’s stance transcends him from commodity to a facilitator of epiphany, divulging the inner needs of art keepers. – Miko Carating

30 | Minotaur Reading II 23” x 14” x 11” - Available in Bronze or Resin

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32 | above : The Sandman 15” x 10” x 6½” - Bronze | below : Small King 13½” x 5” x 2½” - Bronze

above : Minotaur Head 11” x 10” x 10” – Iron Resin | below : Minotaur Bust 6” x 4½” x 4½” - Bronze | 33


34 | Night Dreamer 34½” x 16” x 7½” - Bronze

Boy Brave 23” x 8” x 4” - Bronze | 35


36 | The Suitor 22” x 30” - Charcoal on Paper

Carnival Figure 28” x 14” x 7” - Bronze | 37


38 | Fool 18½” x 6½” x 5½” - Bronze

above : Blind Fool’s Game 6” x 5½” x 2” – Bronze | below : Fairy on a Stool 6” x 5” x 3½” - Bronze | 39


©2014 Beth Carter | Photos by Fernando Milani www.fernandomilani.com | Design by Project 13 www.project13.com

40 | Bull with Flowers 14” x 27” x 7” - Resin

above : Clockwork Elephant 7½” x 6” x 8” - Bronze | back cover : Standing Minotaur 47¼” x 22½” x 22½” - Bronze



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