"Forming Lines: Translations Between Drawing and Sculpture" Exhibition

Like the Spice

poster for "Forming Lines: Translations Between Drawing and Sculpture" Exhibition

This event has ended.

Translations between two and three-dimensional space, the works in this show explore the relationship between line and form. Drawings are both reference and original; sculptures are end product or study and vice versa. This exhibition acts as a Rosetta Stone for visual translation, exploring how drawings turn out when realized in three dimensions and the ways a sculpture's color, form and scale change when documented in two dimensions.

Illusion is almost always explicit in drawings: illusory space, illusory textures, imaginary places and impossible situations are all common factors in drawings. It is easier to forget the illusions in sculpture. From tricks of perspective to deceptive finishes, sculptures aren’t the honest hunks of matter we sometimes take them for.

One key difference between drawing and sculpture is that a drawing’s illusions are usually self-contained, staying on the paper. A sculpture however is always engaged in symbiosis with its environment. A sculpture can make a space seem smaller than it is, dominating everything around it. The same sculpture is dwarfed by an outdoor space, looking like an abandoned toy. The perception of sculpture is easily affected by its context and vice versa, conditions of space and light drastically change our experience of a sculpture whereas a drawing is fairly independent, forming its own context.

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Schedule

from July 25, 2008 to August 31, 2008
Opening Reception: July 25, 6:30–10 pm.

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