Thursday, June 02, 2005
Jim Lambie
Born, 1964, City TK, Scotland
Lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland
Jim Lambie's objects and installations playfully find high-modernist forms in junk from the 1960s and '70s, the very era when "modern" became a truly mass-culture aesthetic. In his floor installation Zobop, black duct tape forms a monochrome abstraction on the floor, its pattern determined by the specific peculiarities of the gallery's architecture. Within this field, Lambie includes a series of sculptures, each of which cleverly transforms found objects into elegant abstractions. Made of chair backs, old handbags, and pieces of mirror, The Jesus and Mary Chain recalls both a plaza and the bedazzled inhabitants who might stroll there. Hanging high above, Sunbed (Tan Tropez) glows like an artificial sun; and leaning against the far wall, the Psychedelic Soul Stick playfully lauds the symbolic power of found abstraction. This unobtrusive work made from a branch wrapped with hundreds of layers of shredded record albums, photos, colored ribbons, and thread is part of a larger series in which bits collected from favorite recordings, significant photos, or beloved sweaters are transformed into a shamanistic object that possesses the combined symbolic powers of all the objects from which it is made.
http://www.themoorespace.org/JimLambie/JimLambie.html
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