Bio and images
Piper Brett’s
sculpture is minimal—or, more properly, neo-minimal. It violates the tenets of
historic twentieth century Minimalism in that, however simple, machined, and
free from the artist’s hand it may appear, Brett
made it. Unlike the prototypical Minimalist, the Spring, 2006 Resident Fellow
at the Creative Glass Center of America, does not sketch or describe an idea
and hire someone else to fabricate. One reason she makes things herself is to
notice how materials behave and to respond. This determines the final form a
work takes.
Another
equally compelling reason for doing it herself might be that Brett knows no one
else could do it better. A young artist, she supports her own sculpture in part
by fabricating things for others. Her work, especially glass, is much in
demand. She’s skilled and a perfectionist — a perfectionist with a sense of
humor.
One
of her favorite pieces she’s made for her own use is a coffee table she
constructed from a shopping cart and Plexiglas with a red stripe. Its
supermarket origin is undisguised and contributes to a sense of play in the
table. “I like to look at shopping carts,” she explains. “They have a
personality. How can you look at something that somebody has made and not form
an opinion about it?”
Brett’s
sculpture embodies narrative or dialogue, not typical elements in classic
Minimalism. A material held in tension, becomes in her work a metaphor for
human tension and the perplexities of human interaction.
The
phenomenologist Maurice Merleau-Ponty wrote about the notion of chiasm,
a kind of reversibility in which an action or characteristic is completed or
complemented by its mirroring opposite. The prototypical example is that of
touching and being touched. How does one distinguish clearly between the two?
Clearly one cannot exist without the other. For Merleau-Ponty it was important
to recognize such dualities as two sides of the same coin.
Although
Brett is not a student of Merleau-Ponty, her work illustrates qualities of chiasm.
A series of large sculptures of metal and Plexiglas interact with a corner (of
the gallery or other exhibition space) in ways which initially appear simple
but are ultimately ambiguous and complex.
Speaking of a piece where Plexiglas appears to cut into the wall, Brett
says, “It’s a little like a passive aggressive situation. [In earlier works], I
had my way with the Plexiglas a little more. It’s like me and the steel telling
the plexi what to do. In earlier pieces,
the plexi is more passive.” By inclding the corner, a given of the display
location, as a material in the sculpture Brett indicates its dynamic
participation in the work.
Brett
is intrigued by sculpture that deals with architecture or relies on
architecture and she appreciates space which is traced or encompassed by more
linear elements as part of the volumetric character of the work. “Initially, I
was interested the outline of space and interaction of materials. The steel and
the plexi form a sort of outline. They are like stick figures. They don’t take
up a lot of room but they have a presence.”
In all this series, she found that
the simplicity of steel was particularly compatible with Plexiglas.
According
to Brett, the ultimate question about almost all her sculpture is “Who is doing
what and to whom?” Is the steel making the strip of Plexiglas curve so tightly?
Or is the Plexiglas insinuating itself into the wall? Because materials are
actively curved, bent, or compressed in the finished sculpture, their
relationship does not seem stable. When we return to the gallery, will they be
in the same positions?
What
Brett calls “the role playing thing” continues to influence her work at
CGCA. Although her sculpture in recent
exhibitions has not included glass, she is a skilled glass blower and technician
and has worked as a gaffer for artists like Hank Murta Adams and Beth Lipman.
She says, “Working with materials like metal and steel and rubber is helping me
understand how materials can speak and I want to understand how I can make
glass speak for me. I think I’m still in the midst of it.”
A
major project at Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center has become an exploration of
the relationship between two unlike shapes and materials. The first is a series
of blown glass spheres which have been manipulated while hot to make a
depression into which a second metal bar-like element is inserted. The
squared-off bar appears to penetrate into the skin of the sphere. Or perhaps it
is being sucked in by the opening and consumed.
“I
didn’t come here thinking I was going to make these balls with the cavity and
put things into them. That was not the plan at all, but now I’m thinking ‘yeah!
If that’s all I make in the hot shop that’s great.’ Take home a lot of them and
do something with them.” The individual balls, currently about the size of
large grapefruit, have something of the appearance of pieces of dough into
which an something has been pressed. If they were cookies, the opening
might be a space for the insertion of nuts and raisins. The glass pleats and
deforms around the regularly shaped depression.
“They
seem humorous but maybe not so humorous.” Brett points out that “a duality of
control” is expressed in the ambiguous relationship between the organic-seeming
sphere and machined geometric bar. “The whole idea is that one is forcing
something onto the other one. Are they eating or being stuffed? Are they
consumers or victims? Who’s aggressive? Who’s passive?”
In
her studio, she uses red painted wooden bars as stand-ins for metal which will
be fabricated later. She feels that two materials are essential to the idea.
Formally, she’s considering configurations vaguely resembling barbells and
others which might include three balls at the ends of a three branched piece of
metal.
She
sandblasted and painted the glass balls white for her maquettes, but does not
plan to paint them for the finished works. She says, “Each time I’m in the hot
shop, the balls get bigger. “I like making big stuff.” A new batch of black
glass will allow Brett to explore the effect of that color on the design. She
plans to chrome some of the metal elements, making them mirror-like. “How will
black and chrome change it? That’s the kind of stuff I’m exploring. I just like
it that I’m here and I’m figuring this stuff out.”