exhibitions
archive 2005


Gerald Giamportone, Untitled Number 5, 1998 Detail

Sculptural Work 1997-2004

 

Gerald Giamportone

 

18 January-12 March 2005

 

press release

The John Hansard Gallery is delighted to be showing the work of Gerald Giamportone, an artist living and working in Los Angeles, whose work has not previously been shown in Britain.

Gerald Giamportone’s work addresses important issues relating to contemporary sculptural practice. Whilst still reflecting the central issues of formalism, the works in this exhibition extend those ideas by looking at opposing concepts such as fragility and strength, temporality and timelessness. They bring together seemingly unconnected materials from both the natural world and industry; combining neoprene, talc, formica and polycarbonate sheeting, with naturally occurring elements such as wood, cork, rose petals, thorns or leaves.

The works are presented in a number of ways, ranging from floor pieces to table top works to wall based photographic prints. All share the common quality of being beautifully hand crafted and despite their pristine, almost clinical, appearance are very much products of a painstaking hand made process. The collection and extraction of natural materials displayed within the formal methods of sculptural display, present striking images, often resembling topography, arctic landscapes or phials as if part of a scientific experiment. The organic materials used eventually disintegrating to a dry dust.

A monograph on the artist and his work will subsequently be published by John Hansard Gallery in Spring 2005.

 

artist interview

GG: Gerald Giamportone
BB: Dr Bernadette Buckley, John Hansard Gallery

BB Hello Gerald Giamportone and thank you very much for agreeing to do this interview for the JHG and for which we will share copyright, if that’s all right with you.

GG [Nods]

BB Let me begin by asking you first to describe some of the works in Gallery 1. These are works which many people in Britain won’t be familiar with, so can you say something about how these works came about.

GG Yes the works you’ll see in Gallery 1 include a series of tables. There are four tables that are lined with various things – cork, Formica or felt. The ones with Formica have shredded rose petals. The ones with cork have thorns, though there’s another one with cork that has long stems. The one with felt has leaves in it. Then the other things in the front gallery are pieces o/in Lexand. They’re actually rose stems that are in Lexand. They’re quite interesting pieces for me because they kind of represent corrections that cannot occur. And the stems, in maybe a hundred years or so, will end up as residue at the bottom of these containers. I’m very attached to these pieces. I still haven’t figured out why but I’m very much attached to them.

BB Well there’s an interesting mix there of the ‘natural’ and the ‘unnatural’ coming together – the plasticity of the containers and the delicacy and fragility and the…entropicness (if you can use that word) of the flowers…

GG Something like that – I do like this idea of the residue – it’s sort of connected to memory. If these stems do become residue, then they’ll be this residue that used to be a rose stem. And ultimately a rose. So this interests me very much. And then in terms of them being things that are in a state of correction, they’ll never be corrected. It’s the idea that they’re encased in something that’s industrial and that has a precision to it and that runs counter to exactly what they are. And so there is this contentious relationship which I think is part of the work in a larger sense as well.

BB Could just you say something more about this ‘state of correction’? Why ‘correction’ – it’s an interesting word – why would they be an object of correction?

GG I’m not sure that they are an ‘object of correction’. I think it’s just a piece of language that I’m using for the lack of a better piece of language. And I think I’ll just leave it at that.

BB Okay fair enough. And then this other term that you used…you see them as being ‘contentious’?

GG I think they’re contentious because they run against the mechanicalness of the industrialness of this sort of thing. They are kind of put in a state of….they’re lodged in these containers and I can’t think of a rose that wants to be lodged, so I think that there is this contentious relationship.

BB The thing that they remind me of very much are those ornaments that used to be left at gravesides – they looked a bit like huge ‘crystal balls’, but they were made out of plastic and they would have a coiled ring of wire around the bottom of them to hold them up – like a cup on a saucer. Then they had a statue of the Virgin Mary or a rose, or both inside them. They would sit on the graves for months or years afterwards. Your objects have something of this about them too – memorials that want to decay but that can’t…

GG I think that I can relate to probably the last few words of what you just said – they want to decay and they can’t. But I’ve never seen exactly what you’re speaking of – not having been raised in Ireland but they sound quite interesting. I frankly can understand a bit of what you’re alluding to here with the work in terms of…some people have said that they’re ‘funereal’ and I think that’s probably what you’re hitting around. I’ve never really viewed them as that sort of thing. I view them as an object and a part of objecthood that I related to. And as opposed to having this immediate bit of meaning for us that has to do with death, or funerals or Irish graveyards or whatever. To me it’s just an object that has come through me. I’m not really content with the idea of necessarily being a cipher for things to come through. But frankly I’m looking at these objects and I’m in a state of wonderment as to why they came about and exactly what they are – not that they need to be anything.

BB But you can’t suppress the, I suppose, the part of these objects that refer to these things – to death, love, mortality etc. These meanings are embedded in these objects – they’re part of our collective mentality – of what we think about when we think about funerals and the rest etc. The very fact that they seem to be gradually dying themselves would point to these associations.

GG Well I think that’s true but I think I think the original conception really was a stack of plastic. I had kept a stack of plastic on my mind for about 6 months before I decided to buy a sheet of it and then I cut it in various configurations and then I looked at the tubes and so on and so forth and thought of what might fit in these things. How this comes around to meaning is of course another thing, and perhaps I’m being a little too revealing in speaking so directly to materials. But it’s important. It’s important to understand that meaning may reside in something, but there is this physicality, there is this unknown, there is this unformed sort of thing. I would say that I’m very much attached to what that’s about and also I feel it’s important to pay homage to what that’s about really – more so than getting into all this layering of meaning and so on. But they’re two sides. They’re not to be denied. What you’re speaking of I don’t deny at all but to reveal these things from inception is really about the materials – perhaps even the absurdity of putting a stem inside of this material – it’s an arcane sort of gesture and I’m still wondering what that’s about and then casing it a little further.

BB But it’s very particularly a rose stem isn’t it? It couldn’t really be anything else could it?

GG Oh it’s a loaded…it’s a very loaded thing that I’ve chosen, but I didn’t choose it because it was loaded. I chose it because it fit.

BB We were talking about language earlier as well and I was wondering how do you approach these objects in terms of the ‘poetic’ and the metaphorical. To me, they seem to come back to this somehow. Is that fair to say?

GG Well it’s a little like a piece of rubber that just folds back to this sort of thing. But in essence, in doing most of this work, I believe that I am kind of usurping metaphor or usurping poetics if you’ll have that, in favour of the physical once again, in favour of the sculptural and ultimately in favour of perception. But I think that the work and work in general is ensconced in interpretation. People simply want to interpret. That’s going to happen. And as much as we live in a physical world, the physical world is open to interpretation. These are sometimes very disparate circumstances and I think that the work does attempt to get into this disparate sort of relationship between these things that I’m using.

BB Yes, because in a sense, many of the works that are here, kind of defy categorisation as well. They’re in between two or more forms. The photograph again which you’re standing seems to me to be between photography and sculpture and not fully residing in either category itself. Is it important to you to occupy that space of ambiguity in your work?

GG Well I think that ambiguity is important. It’s important also to try and come up with exactly what’s in front of your plexus – exactly what you want to do. It’s a very important thing. If it happens to be ambiguous that’s great. If it happens to be something that plays to an audience, so be it. I tend to think that I do more ambiguous things and that’s what I feel more comfortable about and that’s where the work seems to reside – in this state of ambiguity. But I think blending the concrete and the ambiguous is something to do with this.

BB Yeah – I’m sure you know of the story that Baudelaire is supposed to have told – what when asked what ‘sculpture’ was, he replied that it was something that you bumped into when you backed up to see a painting. And true or not, that story raises the whole ‘problem’ of sculpture to some extent – i.e. that it was for a long time viewed as being too dense, too earth-bound to be able to signify what painting could – i.e. the ethereal, the transcendental etc etc. But it seems that you’re not accepting this – or that you wouldn’t accept this kind of distinction.

GG Well I’ve used a rose in this work specifically within this work to address sculpture and I’ve used sculpture to address the rose, so you just taken things from these places. And if I come up with something that’s buoyant that happens to be sculpture, that’s all the better. I’d defy exactly what you’ve said.

BB Because this is sculpture that’s not about carving or forming in that sense…or shaping…

GG Oh it is about forming. It’s a great deal about forming but I think it’s the forming that’s obviously of the mind and obviously of the unknown. It’s just (not to sound too obvious here) about ‘how can I put this together?’ ‘What is going to actually arise from this?’ What is going to emit from this sort of thing?

BB Yes I think that that was badly put, on my part. The word that I was grasping for was modelling more than forming… you know, the idea that something is carved out of something else.

GG Right, so that’s the chisel thing - that’s the typical sort of sculpture which I admire enormously but it’s just not what I do.

BB But there is this reference back to that in the work here – for example in the way that you use talcum powder. We were talking earlier about it being soapstone – (and the fact that soapstone was itself one of the first modelling materials used by carvers, because it was a relatively soft stone). The connection has resonance for you, hasn’t it?

GG Well it’s something that I happened upon. I think to me, the beauty of it’s incredible logic. Soapstone is the softest mineral and here I have made it into a flat fractal that seems to represent sculpture. And it’s not really meant as a piece of wit or something ironical – it’s simply what it is. And for me, somehow the fact that it’s flat and it’s also a sculptural material. I mean we’ve seen ‘primitive’ cultures carving things out of soapstone for centuries. So it has a bit of meaning but it also has these dissonant qualities, just because of the way I’ve cast it. But it seems to represent a fracturing as well. It has these dissonant qualities to what sculpture is. But indeed it’s also sculptural.

BB They’re paradoxical qualities aren’t they? Because this is stone, but it’s stone that can be blown away.

GG Yes, paradoxical qualities. Nonetheless I view it as sculptural and I view it as something that addresses sculpture.

BB Jon Thompson curated a show some years ago at the Hayward Gallery. It was called Gravity and Grace and it brought together some Arte Povera works, which I think was interesting wanted to ask you about for two reasons here. One is because, for me, some of the work here reminds me of that of, say Giovanni Anselmo. But also, because the work here does seem to share with those works, these qualities of having both gravity and grace. I always thought that that was a wonderful description that Thompson used to describe that work – not least because at first glance these terms ‘gravity’ and ‘grace’ don’t seem to go together, but yet in this context they fit perfectly.

GG Well ultimately, as I said, the floor pieces are really about logic and I think when things become logical, they do have a grace – an incredible., perhaps a lasting grace. What more could you ask from a piece of art? Not to tout what I’ve done but frankly, I’m just pleased with this equation.

BB But grace, elegance, these tend, to the western mind, to draw us back to ‘the beautiful’ – something that in contemporary art today we perhaps have some difficulty with. We tend not to know what the status of beauty is anymore. We’re not quite sure if ‘the beautiful’ is earnest enough. Or what is it that gets under our skin about beauty and that we can’t quite handle? Could you just tell me whether or not for example, you would speak of these works as beautiful?

GG I view these specific fractals as beautiful – without a doubt – and if it gets under somebody’s skin then so be it. I frankly don’t really want to deal with the science of fractals though I can probably go on a little bit about that – not too long! But I think that the fact that they do have beauty and they do have function is something that is important to me and is important to the work. I don’t think they’re beautiful fiat by the same token. I think their beauty, frankly has yet to be realised, by myself or by perhaps a future audience.

BB What do you mean by that exactly?

GG Well perhaps there’s more of a history to come to this work and this is a very hopeful statement, but I just think that beauty can be defined in various ways and I don’t need to cater to the moment at all. Because the moment might be rather faulty. The moment is temporal and maybe those are not the sort of things that I’m addressing when I’m doing this.

BB But you do speak of being contentious…

GG Yes…well it’s less that I’m contentious, it’s just that…ultimately if you look at this work – it’s very soft and very quiet. I mean talc – what else could be softer or quieter? And ultimate contentious thing? Perhaps we’re speaking of places which are ultimately just not ‘speakable’ about. And that’s okay – that’s fine – I think we possibly need more of that. For me to stand here and tell you that that is what the work embodies is highly pretentious, but I don’t mind work that is seemingly contentious because it doesn’t really immediately signify something to you. And perhaps later on maybe there is more of a signifier to the work, and it becomes less contentious.

BB The other reason why I spoke about Arte Povera was because of it’s ideal of it’s being a ‘poor’ art (in both senses of the term). Nothing was to be in the work that didn’t have essentially to be there. It had to be…not pared down in the Mimimalist sense…but any extraneous signifiers had to be left out. Also there’s something so very physical about some of that work. As a viewer one encounters it, almost in a psychological way. Perhaps I’m reading too much into this and this is just my response. But I wonder if you could say something about this and the way the viewer interacts with the work?

GG As I said before, my interests are in expanding perception. I do really think highly of Arte Povera. I saw a show, just so many months ago in Los Angeles at the Geffin and I was utterly impressed. I don’t really do work thinking of Arte Povera. I have other ideas. I live in the middle of Los Angeles – a lush place, a wealthy place – and to do Arte Povera would be counter to the culture. But who knows, maybe I am just this kid sitting in a corner with a piece of wood, trying to come up with what he can. But ultimately, the work is really about expanding perception. And that’s exactly what I want to do.

BB Can you give me some hint as to what you might mean by ‘perception’?

GG In the case of these works, I think its just the marriage of these tables and this frail object that’s the rose and the various ways that I’ve cast this rose – where they’re shredded or whether they’re pulverised – you know just exactly what they look like as planes. Actually these newer tables that I’ve done are kind of interesting to me because they’re both planes on a rose. The leaf is a plane and the petal is a plane. And so now they’re sitting on a table which is a plane as well and which has an inset which I’ve specifically made as a plane. To me it’s kind of interesting thing to pull those things together. It’s also interesting because you don’t necessarily think of a plane as sculpture.

BB In the way that one doesn’t necessarily think of photography as sculpture?

GG Well the history of photography is sculpture. Some artists say at the turn of the century – Medardo Rosso being one of them – just cataloguing his work, that you can come forward quite a bit and talk about photography and sculpture – there’re been quite a bit written on it.

BB I guess what I was talking about was just the fact that one tends to associate the plane with something other than sculpture – with drawing perhaps or two dimensional work. And in terms of that categorisation of one genre as opposed to another genre, that this photography again seems to be between genres – to be defying any systematic attempts at categorisation.

GG Well I’m not really a defiant…you know objecthood for me is the preceding object and the history of objects. It’s kind of that marriage.

BB But these are all objects that have crumbled – that have memory, that have a past, that perhaps have a future and all of that would seem to suggest a certain irreverence towards the object?

GG Not necessarily. I just think that things are wide open and why not? Things are wide open for you to interpret, for you to form, to divine and so on and so forth and I think I take those liberties.

BB Do you think that your work has anything in common with any of the early ‘postmoderns’ shall we say, or ‘late moderns’ or late mid century artworks?

GG Absolutely, they do seem to have some connection to Minimalist work., although I think that the rose stems etc, take them to another place. I think they have some connection to Art Povera without a doubt. The fact that they do raise so many questions and I don’t mean to go over this too lightly or too quickly. The fact that sculpture would be questioned or whether the flat plane would be questioned or any of this sort of thing, is somewhat postmodern. But it’s not like I’m trying to embody all this and I don’t mean to speak for myself.

BB I’m not asking you this question so as to exhaust the work of any meaning, but just as a way to try to understand the work a little better through talking about it. And as you were saying earlier, this talking about the work can be a problem in itself. In talking about it, We are doing something to it. We are changing it and re-forming it. It seems to me that the shaping of words has an impact on the work. I wonder what you think of that?

GG The shaping of words. Yes I think that the shaping of words is very important. Language falls out of meaning. It becomes too laden maybe with some meaning that comes from a moment – a moment we’re going through – a ten-year moment, a two-year moment whatever. So I think that when I ascribe language to this work, I try to bring some language forward – not a conscious thing, but just in terms of having thoughts and trying to form language with regard to the experience of this work. Perhaps some language is expanded a bit. This language may not extend to the average audience but it’s definitely something that comes to my mind anyhow.

BB Do you see yourself as working with a particular set of syntax – to extend that metaphor a little?

GG I don’t try to do that – I don’t think that that’s one of my intentions. We’ve got to communicate so we’ve got to come up with language that tends to align itself with what we’re doing. That’s the best we can do. Some language aligns itself better than others. But I don’t have language that sets up parameters. It’s just not what I’m about.

BB When you talk about meaning and meaningfulness, do you see these works essentially as being empty of meaning, or as having meaning attached to them?

GG I think that if they vacate meaning, they vacate meaning and I’m content with that state.

BB And you said also earlier that you want to see it…that it’s very important to you to put the work there so that you see it, so that you can bring an object into being. Could you talk a little bit about that?

GG There isn’t too much to say with regard to that. I think that that’s ultimately how we operate. A painter wants to see something. A sculptor wants to see something, and it becomes part of a realisation he goes after and that’s all that I have to say about that.

BB Okay we haven’t talked about the floor pieces yet and the fractals. Could you tell us something about how they came about?

GG The floor pieces came about because…just thinking about pedestals…thinking of things that would hold sculpture and I put the fractals on top of them. I think the fractals work extremely well as renditions of sculpture.

BB Why do you call them ‘fractals’?

GG I call them ‘fractals’ because they’re cast as fractals and they have fractures in them. They get into this area of exactly what a fractal is which is something organic as well as something which is geometric at the same time. They have all these properties. So that’s one of the reasons why I call them ‘fractals’. There are other reasons…

BB Why are you so interested in tracking the breaking-up, the dissolving, the dissolution of things?

GG One of my ideas with regard to sculpture – and as I say I’m not new to this – is this idea of ‘sculptural dissolution’. So this furthers the idea of ‘sculptural dissolution’. One of the people who came up with this before is Donald Judd – as we all well know. But I think that this perhaps takes this a little further. At least that would be my intention. This idea of dissolution within the fractal and within the material that I’m using, seems to work very well.

BB I wouldn’t have said that Judd’s work speaks of ‘dissolution’ particularly. They are open and they’re… ‘serial’ I suppose is the clichéd term to use.

GG They are floorworks…but I think that in his work, he was concerned with getting rid of abstraction. That’s primarily what he’s known for. But I think that in his critical thinking, he was very concerned with this idea of sculptural dissolution. But these pieces are just, you know, they’re objects – they’re things that I’ve done because of a plane of wood, a material, several materials and they’re things that I ultimately wanted to bring into existence.

BB Fascinatingly one of the floor pieces has trolley wheels attached to it – which you know raises many associations for the average viewer as well. Can you tell me why you decided to put one on wheels and the other not?

GG I think the one on wheels actually was just the idea that you know, I had things that looked so fragile, it would be nice to have the impression that they would move or something like this and it just created this tension. The other is just a typical pedestal that sits on the floor, on the earth and perhaps has sculpture on it.

BB Do you conceive of sculpture as something that is experienced in the round? It seems to me that several of the objects that you’ve got here, one never sees the back of (literally) and I just wondered because one of the definitions of Minimal sculpture referred to the fact that you could walk around it. You could experience its weight in relation to the bulk of your body, in relation to what else is there. But you have this very ambivalent relation to the round. One can’t for example, get under the fractals. One can’t get behind the tables or behind the photographs.

GG That’s partially true. The tables you can definitely walk around and likewise the metal floor pieces. In terms of the fractals themselves, they do have these fissures and the fissures do have shadows. There have been some early arguments that one of the reasons that sculpture is so much more interesting than painting is that you do have shadow to it. And you do have this thing where you can go around it and it does hold your interest from this point of view. But I think what I’ve done is just compacted these shadows and given them to you in a more concentrated experience.

BB What do think when you hear of people talking, say of the psychological impact of the work. Does that have any resonance for you?

GG Well you know, I think I operate out of a level of insularity and if that gets shared it’s great. I realise at the moment that there’s a lot of work that is audience friendly. My work is friendly but from a different place.

BB Could you tell me a little about this final piece here in which the rose stems are again used, but this time there is no plastic receptacle in which they are encased.
It’s a piece that’s taken a little bit of time to evolve. It’s a piece with ango-iron and natural green clay, perhaps a piece of wood within that to just hold the rose stems very slightly, and a pedestal. Frankly I’m very satisfied with this piece and I probably have less to say about it than just about anything.

GG You have brought up this word ‘pedestal’ a number of times now. What is it about the pedestal that especially interests you?

BB I just think it lifts things from the ground. It perhaps lifts rose stems off the ground – rose stems that are without their rose, without their thorns, without anything really. It sort of venerates exactly what they are in an elevated place.

GG Gerald Giamportone, thank you very much for this doing this interview for us, thank you.


 

external events

Turner Sims Concert Hall
The John Hansard Gallery is also organising a one-day symposium to accompany it's forthcoming Astro Black Morphologies exhibition (5 April - 14 May 2005) by Flow Motion. This symposium comprises an exciting line-up of internationally-acclaimed speakers from both academic and artistic worlds, and will explore the connection between astro-physics and visual art practices today. It will also afford delegates with the opportunity to experience the performance piece Astro Dub Morphologies.

The symposium is scheduled to be held at the Turner Sims Concert Hall, Highfield Campus, University of Southampton, on 7 May. (Come back soon for further details.)

Funding
Exhibitions at the John Hansard Gallery and WilkinsonGallery have been supported by the The Henry Moore Foundation.
Performances at Tate Modern have been funded by The Felix Trust for Art.


Southampton University
copyright © 2002-2003 The John Hansard Gallery
Arts Council England Logo