Wopo Holup: Curated by Yvonne Jacquette

Page 1

Wopo Holup



Curated by Yvonne Jacquette

Wopo Holup OCTOBER 20 - december 1, 2012


BOARD OF DIRECTORS

CUE FELLOWS

Gregory Amenoff Theodore S. Berger Sanford Biggers Thomas G. Devine Thomas K.Y. Hsu Vivian Kuan Corina Larkin Joyce E. Robinson Jan Rothschild

Polly Apfelbaum Theodore S. Berger, Chair Ian Cooper William Corbett Michelle Grabner Eleanor Heartney Deborah Kass Corina Larkin Rossana Martinez Juan Sรกnchez Irving Sandler, Senior Fellow Carolyn Somers

Brian D. Starer

CURATORIAL ADVISORY COUNCIL Gregory Amenoff William Corbett Lynn Crawford Trenton Doyle Hancock Sharon Lockhart Thomas Roma Marjorie Welish Andrea Zittel

Lilly Wei

STAFF Jeremy Adams, Executive Director Marni Corbett, Development Director Beatrice Wolert-Weese, Programs Director Jessica Gildea, Programs Coordinator Sara Lotty, Development & Office Assistant

2


OUR Mission

CUE Art Foundation is a dynamic visual arts center dedicated to creating essential career and educational opportunities for emerging artists of all ages. Through exhibitions, studio residencies, arts education, and public programs, CUE provides artists and audiences with sustaining and meaningful experiences and resources.

3


/Bio

wopo holup

Wopo Holup is a New York based artist who has completed more than two-dozen public art projects across the country. Holup’s bronze and iron work can be found at the Philadelphia Zoo, Historic Battery Park in Manhattan, Tampa International Airport, among many others. Collaborations with architects, government agencies, and inspired communities helped Holup to achieve her artistic goals. Articles and responses from Holup’s work have appeared in Sculpture, Landscape Architecture, and The New York Times. Drawings produced with Holup’s projects have been shown in solo exhibitions at Mill Museum, National Park Service, Lowell, MA; Urban Culture Project in Kansas City, MO; Charles Shulz Gallery at Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, CA; the Center for Architecture in New York City, and were shown in a traveling exhibit for The Center for Creativity and Design, University of North Carolina.

4


/Statement

My drawings are about nature’s flow—its branching and dividing—and the disbursement of energy. Rivers, traffic patterns and cultural hierarchies are all forms of this flow. My public art projects are also about environmental systems. Drawings for the public art projects are made to illustrate and to clarify project ideas, and sometimes they spark ideas for an entirely new drawing series. The Concord drawing was started when I became involved in a public art project along that river. Segments of the river are drawn vertically on 84”x18” paper panels to form linear patterns. The river itself is accurately scaled from a satellite view, but north/south and east/west directions are not. The drawing is centered on the Concord River and includes streams feeding it such as the Assabet and Sudbury Rivers. The Concord joins the Merrimack and then flows on to its final destination—the Atlantic Ocean. The science of hydrology tells us that the Atlantic is not the end of the trip but just one step in the endless cycling of earth’s water. The metal leaf used on the drawings—silver and gold, our most precious metals—acknowledge treasured sites such as the Nile, the Mississippi and the almost mythological Sea of Galilee. Finding new views of these well known places has been an exciting experience. I was drawn to the plant-like shapes in The Nile beginning with the northern irrigated valley “bloom” to the central river “stem” and finally the southern “root” at Lake Victoria. The Mississippi shimmers in silver ribbons from an airplane view and a satellite image shows man made deltas competing with natural tributaries as the river flows into the Gulf. The sea in The Sea of Galilee is shaped like a human heart and it is connected by waterways to the Dead Sea—the two seas like jewels on a river necklace.

5


/Bio

Yvonne Jacquette

Yvonne Jacquette is a New York and Maine based artist who began her career at the Rhode Island School of Design. Perhaps best known for her panoramic depictions of aerial landscapes of major cities nationwide, Jacquette has also illustrated books of poetry and designed sets. Her teaching experience includes the Moore College of Art, visiting artist at University of Pennsylvania from 1972-1976 and 1979-1982, Parsons School of Design from 1975-1978, Graduate School of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania from 1979-1984, and has been a visiting critic at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts since 1991. Yvonne Jacquette had her first group show in 1962 and has been exhibiting steadily since. Her work is included in over forty museums today, with a number of public collections throughout New York City. Her work is held in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and the Brooklyn Museum. Recent exhibitions include the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. and in Staatliche Museum in Berlin, Germany.

6


/Statement

River Drawings evoke much more than that depicted. They imply views of the countries they inhabit: the surrounding mountains, hills, or plains that allow their meandering. In these drawings the light coming through the mylar grounds are highly contrasted by the silhouette of each river’s shape but even more by the specific materials used: gold leaf, silver leaf, graphite, etc. The mylars were derived from other public projects yet further allude to the strength and elegance of nature.


Wopo Holup

8


Concord River Drawing [detail], 2008. The Merrimack flows into Newbury Port and the Atlantic Ocean

9


The Concord River Drawing, 2008. 84” x 288” (16 panels). Aluminum leaf and pencil on Denril Vellum. The drawing is centered on the Concord River, but

10

includes the Assabet and Sudbury Rivers feeding the Concord, and the Concord joining the Merrimack and on to its final destination— The Atlantic Ocean.


11


The Missouri River Drawing [detail], 2007. 93� x 38�. The Missouri is mapped from its headwaters in Montana to its meeting with the Mississippi in St. Louis.

12


The Mississippi River Delta, 2010. 84� x 90� (5 panels). Ebony pencil, aluminum and colored leaf on vellum. The Mississippi river as it flows into the Gulf of Mexico. Jewel-like rectangles are properties along the river delta.

13


14


The Nile, 2010. 84� x 216� (12 panels). Ebony, acrylic paint and Colored Leaf on Denril Vellum. River Nile from the Mediterranean Sea to its source at Lake Victoria. Colored leaf represents the fertile green Nile Valley; ebony pencil continues the river through the Aswan Dam, marshlands and finally Lake Victoria.

15


Three Panel Nile, 2010. 84� x 54� (3 Panels). Ebony pencil on Denril Vellum. The Nile as it enters the Mediterranean Sea.

16


Mississippi Delta II, 2010. 84� x 36� (2 panels). Ebony pencil on Denril Vellum.

17


18


The Sea of Galilee and Dead Sea, 2012. 84” x 36” (2 panels). Japanese colored leaf, acrylic pain and ebony pencil on Denril Vellum. The Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea with salt flats below.

19


20


S. Platt with Highway System, 2010. 84� x 198� (11 panels). Copper leaf and ebony pencil on Denril vellum.

21


Delaware Bay, 2011. 66” x 40” (triptych). Ebony pencil on Strathmore Bond.

22


Texas Rivers, 2011. 30” x 44” Ebony pencil on Strathmore Bond. All the rivers of Texas flowing into the Gulf of Mexico.

23


Japan 2011, 2011. 20” x 30”. Ebony pencil on Strathmore Bond.

24


Mapping the Flow: Wopo Holup’s River Drawings By Nicholas Robbins

I had often stood on the banks of the Concord watching the lapse of the current, an emblem of all progress, following the same law with the system, with time, and all that is made. —Henry David Thoreau, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, 1849 Rivers are the ostensible subjects of Wopo Holup’s drawings, but not in any conventional sense. As they were for Thoreau, rivers are Holup’s point of departure for the investigation of an expansive range of questions and concerns—aesthetic, scientific, historical, and ecological. Derived from satellite imaging systems, Holup’s drawings present themselves as a kind of hand-crafted, subjectivized mapping, a personalized rendering of landscapes originally captured by a data-driven, all-seeing eye. From these technological images, the artist regains a sense of human, even spiritual, presence and a felt connection to natural form, while subtly drawing our attention to the (often troubled) relationship we have as a species to the vast and complex natural systems that organize our world. The aerial view that the works in this exhibition engage has figured prominently in much recent art dealing with landscape—think of Robert Smithson’s documentation of Spiral Jetty, Richard Long’s cartographic perambulations, or Andrea Zittel’s hypnotic, tessellated images of suburban sprawl. Holup’s drawings also recall Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s pencil and collage studies for their monumental

25


Mapping the Flow: Wopo Holup’s River Drawings

interventions in natural environments, art works that are in effect a grandiose type of drawing that can only be fully grasped from above. (Interestingly, it was an invitation from Christo and Jeanne-Claude that brought Holup to New York City, where she now works for much of the year. She met the artistic duo in Sonoma County in the early 1970s, where she was then living, during their preparations for Running Fence.) The drawings’ heavenly perspective allows us to apprehend the rivers’ meandering forms as totalities, and in their grand sweep they make apparent the ways in which rivers define landscapes, articulate cosmologies, and structure ways of life. Yet, on closer scrutiny, Holup’s drawings partake in a caressive transcription of the particularities and vagaries of her subjects, reframing the rivers’ paths as intricate networks of handwrought line and color, detailing taut curves and infinite branchings, both elegant in appearance and efficient in description. Shifting back and forth between these disparate registers, the works balance big-picture symbolic and cultural potency with the immanent beauty of naturally occurring form. Over the last two decades, Holup has produced a large body of outdoor sculptural projects sited in predominantly urban environments around the United States. Often drawing on the histories and geographic characteristics specific to these sites, her public practice inflects newly built spaces with an evocation of previous lives and habitats. Case in point is her monumental bas-relief sculpture Common Ground, 2005, installed on the walls beneath an overpass of the Bronx-Queens Expressway. Incorporating friezes of native foliage and wild grasses, the sculpture offers up the diversity of local flora as an analogue of the international, polyglot population of Queens. Holup’s initial involvement in these projects was largely a matter of serendipity, the result of a public art project committee member seeing a group of her sculptures in a show at the SoHo gallery Harm Bouckaert in 1982. But through her public works, she came to value collaborating with the many different stakeholders associated with these projects—residents, architects, planners, politicians, and historians—weaving together in the process multiple narratives, both natural and cultural, intrinsic to, but not always visible in, the sites and landscapes her projects survey. Holup’s specific interest in rivers developed out of one of her most prominent public works, River That Flows Two Ways, a series of cast iron sculptural panels that she completed in 2000 for the Promenade at Battery Park in New York. The panels,

26


set into the walkway’s seawall railing, layer images of the social and ecological history of the Hudson, envisioning a space shared by American Indians, Dutch traders, and mercantile shipyard workers, along with the Hudson River’s fish and birds. Through her work on this project, Holup became interested in the ways in which the Hudson, like many rivers, has over time functioned as a nexus for complex historical and sociocultural forces. This interest is elaborated upon in an ongoing public project that the artist is developing for the Parks and Conservation Trust in Lowell, Massachusetts. Holup was commissioned to contribute to the redevelopment of the Concord River Greenway in Lowell, an archetypal nineteenth-century American mill town whose prosperity depended upon the river flowing through it—a prosperity that led directly to the waterway’s acute pollution. The artist plans to integrate passages from Thoreau’s 1849 literary travelogue A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, along with texts and statements by Lowell residents past and present, into built elements of the park along the river, threading local history through this new civic space. It was during her work on this project that the artist began to make the earliest piece in this exhibition, The Concord River Drawing, 2008. This sixteen-panel, mural-sized drawing traces the river’s path, just as Thoreau had done on his weeks-long journey, from the river’s source, through its confluence with the Merrimack at Lowell, to the wide bay at Newburyport where it meets the Atlantic. Though clearly related to her public, research-based projects, the drawings on view in this exhibition stem from a more personal, subjective meditation motivated by Holup’s attraction to the beauty of the rivers’ contours, which are treated as found shapes deployed in lyrical, fragmented compositions. Holup has long made use of elements extracted from the natural world, forms that are selected for their aesthetic properties but nevertheless retain a referential connection to their original context. For instance, as a graduate student in California at Mills College in the early 1970s, Holup presented, as her thesis work in printmaking, a group of plaster sculptures cast from the footprints of cows that grazed on the farm where she was living. Each footprint is similar but not identical, just as the shapes of the rivers and deltas she depicts resemble one another yet are resolutely distinct. Bespeaking a concrete connection to place, this serial elaboration also invites a close examination of the formal properties of “natural” composition. 27


Mapping the Flow: Wopo Holup’s River Drawings

Holup’s artworks are also marked by the subtle abstraction of her subject matter—in many of her river drawings, for example, she has segmented the river’s path onto adjoining panels, adhering to the river’s curvaceous profile, but not to its overall composition, defamiliarizing the referent in a way that invites subjective elaboration. Holup’s use of evocative materials further opens her work to visual association, such as her application of ebony pencil in striated patterns that obliquely evoke the lapping, fluid surface of the water. And many of the works feature metallic leaf, which is applied over selected passages of the drawings. In some works, the foil’s reflectiveness suggests the shimmering light bouncing off a river’s surface, as is the case with The Concord River Drawing. In The Nile, 2010, one of several works that focus on particularly iconic rivers, gold leaf demarcates the river’s floodplains with an allusive richness that suggests that region’s fertile but fragile ecology. The metallic surfaces also directly reference the use of “precious” materials in religious art to impart a sense of metaphysical power and solemnity. In Holup’s own words, rivers and the landscapes they help shape are “deserving of veneration,” and these materials suggest an aura of spiritual reverence. Although they are relatively faithful renderings of the rivers’ paths, Holup’s drawings intentionally evoke other forms as well. The delta region depicted in the leftmost panels of The Nile, for instance, resembles a flower’s bloom, compositionally balanced on its right by the black bulb-like shape of Lake Victoria, one of the river’s sources; in The Concord River Drawing, the riverbeds resemble screens of hanging vines or a series of tree branches; Texas Rivers, 2011, could be a delicately depicted diagram of nervous system tissue. Far from random, these associations point to what Holup calls “the obvious order of nature”—the way in which configurations and patterns in nature repeat and recur at every level. These linkages have held an enduring appeal for artists and art historians: John Ruskin’s assertion, for example, that the unity and “common law” of design is exemplified by trees, from their whole form down to the shape and array of their leaves; or Karl Blossfeldt’s lifelong project photographing fragments of plant matter in order to capture what he considered to be the essential laws of beauty and proportion found in nature. Holup cites the recent book Design in Nature by Adrian Bejan and J. Peder Zane, a mechanical engineer and a journalist, respectively, as a text that is particularly

28


representative of her concerns. The book analyzes structures both natural and social in order to show how they develop according to universal laws of design that maximize flows, whether of water, energy, or ideas. Despite its aesthetic elegance and languorous quality of line, a river’s course is, in fact, determined by the most efficient path of its water to sea level. For Holup, an understanding of the physical laws and properties that underpin natural beauty does not diminish our wonder or that beauty’s intimations of a mysterious order. Rather, this knowledge points to the pervasive interconnectedness of things—and a link between scientific knowledge and aesthetic experience—that subtly binds together all the elements, living and inanimate, of a landscape. At the same time as Holup’s work addresses universal questions of form and structure, it is also motivated by a desire to focus attention on the relationship between civilization and the natural world. Some of her drawings deal quite directly with land use—such as The Mississippi, 2010, in which the French “long lot” farm plots that radiate off the spine of the river are delineated in foils of alternating hues. Rather than expressing concern for the loss of “wild” environments, this work points instead to the inextricably linked natural and cultural forces that shape this landscape. Similarly, Mississippi Delta II, 2011, developed out of Holup’s fascination with the intermingling water and land forms that spread out into the Gulf, while also documenting the topography of the region as it undergoes rapid erosion due to the depletion of the river’s silt by upriver dams and levees. The natural formations depicted by these works may seem eternal or autonomous from human life, but they bear the effects of our presence. Tracing these rivers from their beginnings to their ends, Holup’s drawings remind us not only of the recurring patterns that bind together the elements of the natural world, but also of the way in which our own past, present, and future are caught up in those rivers’ currents.

29


Nicholas Robbins is a curatorial assisatant at the Whitney Museum of

This essay was written as part of the

American Art, New York, and a staff member of the Yale AIDS Memorial

Young Art Critics Mentoring Program, a

Project. His essay on the work of Edward Hopper will be included in the

partnership between AICA USA (US section

upcoming catalogue published by the Whitney. He graduated from Yale

of International Association of Art Critics) and

University in 2010 with a degree in the history of art.

CUE Art Foundation, which pairs emerging writers with AICA mentors to produce original

Jeff Gibson is an artist and critic who lives and works in New York. A

essays on a specific exhibiting artist.

former senior editor of Sydney/Los Angeles-based magazine Art&Text, Gibson moved to New York in 1998 to work for Artforum, where he

Please visitaicausa.org for further information

is currently managing editor. He has shown, most recently, at The

on AICA USA, or cueartfoundation.org to

Suburban in Chicago and Stephan Stoyanov Gallery in New York. In

learn how to participate in this program. Any

January 2011, two of his videos were projected onto the facade of the

quotes are from interviews with the author

Everson Museum in Syracuse, New York, as part of Syracuse University’s

unless otherwise specified.

“Urban Video Project.” He is currently working on two artist’s books and

No part of this essay may be reproduced

solo shows for New York and Melbourne.

without prior consent from the author. Lilly Wei is AICA’s Coordinator for the program this season. For additional arts-related writing, please visit on-verge.org

30


31


*NEW ADDRESS cueartfoundation.org CUE Art Foundation 137­West 25th Street (between 6th and 7th avenues) New York, NY

*

Catalog: elizabeth ellis design Printing: mar+x myles inc. using 100% wind-generated power All artwork © Wopo Holup


CUE Art Foundation’s operations and programs are made possible with the generous support of foundations, corporations, government agencies, individuals, and its members. Major Programmatic Support

Accademia Charitable Foundation, Ltd., CAF American Donor Fund, The Viking Foundation, AG Foundation, Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation, Compass Equity, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, The Greenwich Collection, Ltd., Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, William Talbot Hillman Foundation, The Hyde and Watson Foundation, the Joan Mitchell Foundation, The Pollock-Krasner Foundation, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts (a state agency).

media sponsor:

33


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.