WheatonArts :: Creative Glass Center of America :: Critic Residency :: Robin Rice Essays
Robin Rice Essays
A cluster of fist-sized unfinished spheres in Stine
Bidstrup’s studio at WheatonArts suggest the interests of this Winter 2007
Resident Fellow of the Creative Glass Center of America. Each is a model the
structure of the eye. At the center of each sphere is a small hollow spot that
represents the blind spot at the center of the vision of each eye. Ironically,
the point which provides no visual information is located where the optic nerve
is joined to the retina. Bidstrup considers this anatomical reality a provocative
phenomenon both literally, in terms of visual cognition, and as metonymy. Visually, we can’t see what is most central.
Culturally or interpersonally, we are often similarly ignorant.
Much of Bidstrup’s work deliberately confuses or misleads
the viewer. Perhaps by undermining our confidence in the validity of what we
think we perceive, “we may become more aware and interact better,” she
suggests.
Bidstrup’s interest in the way cognition stubs it toes in
an unfamiliar context has roots in her own experience. Born and raised in
At CGCA, she explored some of these ideas through the
construction of doughnut-shaped blown forms containing “worm holes” and
twisting möbius surfaces. The complex forms are simultaneously more visible and
more confusing because they bear precise grid-based lines. The painstaking
technical process involves transferring relatively simple computer-generated
graphic patterns onto the glass. These are then sand-blasted, permanently
changing the glass surface and stenciled with Paradise Paints which heat fuses
to glass. The effect is both scientific (or pseudo-scientific) and highly
decorative, suggestive of elaborate historic Venetian latticino work. More than other work she has done, these
pieces conflate an unsettling skewing of vision with a sense of morphing space
and time. The abstract clarity of mathematics and chaos theory becomes oddly
tactile and accessible in these new exploratory works.
A three part video work Double Visions (2006) reveals the power of context and point of
view in constructing our understanding. Bidstrup built a model of a section of
One was shot indoors in the artist’s
studio; one on the roof of a skyscraper in the city; and one in the dessert.
Bidstrup sees this trio of videos as a turning point in her work, as it
suggests how “modernist cities create and control communities where many people
live together. Good intentions can turn out to have the opposite effect,” she
observes. The context—whatever it is—is important in shaping what it contains
from living people to solidly constructed glass boxes.
Last modified 08:33 PM 03/01/2008



