Bio and images
"It's too easy to please people with the beauty of the
material," muses Norman Courtney as he contemplates a simple
piece of flat cast glass. Nevertheless, the Fall 2002
Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America has
devoted over two decades and much skill and inventiveness to
sharing the beautiful "light and shadow and life" of glass
with others.
Courtney has been casting glass for some 20 years. For the
last 12 of these, he's been primarily occupied with public
commissions, some of which do not involve glass. In fact, it
might be said that today he is more public artist than glass
artist. Even as he experimented solo cast glass experiments
at CGCA, work moved forward on a recreation center in
Columbia Missouri for which he'd designed architecture with
sculptural components: a curved wall with a pool and a water
slide--all without glass.
Courtney is realistic about the compromises inherent in
successful public work. "It's a fine line to walk: responding
to history and the local vernacular." He meditates on his
successes in contrast to the notorious cautionary histories
of Richard Serra and Diego Rivera who each, for very
different reasons, made public works which were removed
because they did not please. "The challenge in public art is
to engage people in ways they don't expect. They don't come
there looking for art."
Courtney has worked very abstractly and very
representationally. He is adept at thinking in terms of areas
of light and shadow as a way of structuring architectural
experience, though his work is always marked by a satisfying
sense of order. "Color is often a problem," he mentions
surprisingly. "Everybody thinks they know about color."
Colored glass and other materials are also difficult to
light. Courtney's solution is often clear glass, backed with
mirror when possible. "I'm interested in dealing with light.
As you move by that piece all these lights and shadows
change." Nevertheless, in spite of myriad advantages,
including an enhanced sense of space, Courtney does not feel
married to glass -- not because he has lost interest in the
material but because the project has to be his primary focus.
The reasons for choosing a specific material are specific. A
relief wall in a mental hospital, which might have been
glass, had to be "attack rated" and, so, was constructed of
aluminum.
Although Courtney relishes the task of dealing with new
technologies ("Silicone to glaze pieces together; powder
coating; engineering: awesome! I've taken on jobs before I
knew how to do them. That's what keeps me intrigued by it.")
and working with crews so large he says he sometimes feels
like a film producer, he misses the freedom, immediacy and
zest of art as play. "I haven't worked on any discreet
objects or gallery work in a long time," he admits ruefully.
He applied to CGCA specifically for the opportunity to be an
artist working alone in a studio with only himself to please.
Yet, in the midst of his residency, work proceeded on a
project he for which he was responsible and some of his
experiments concerned techniques which might be applied to
large-scale work. He recognized, "Even here, I can't separate
my artistic side from my public art side."
Still, acknowledging that "Artists are renegades by nature,"
he deliberately set himself to break rules and make "a couple
of really silly things. I brought my old casting toys. . . ."
In striking contrast to the realistic animal and human
figures, often athletes, frequently depicted in Courtney's
public relief sculptures, he sand cast real objects from
boxes of assorted items he'd brought to CGCA. These included
toy models of a brain and of a fetus, belt buckles, meat
tenderizers (for texture), a baseball and a croquet ball.
CGCA residents work in the historic Wheaton Village factory
side-by-side with glass blowers who demonstrate traditional
functional techniques for visitors and make many objects
which are sold in the Wheaton Village gift shop. A history of
fashions in glass objects could be illustrated through the
factory's collection of dozens of antique but perfectly
usable cast-iron molds in all sizes and shapes. They were
originally designed to produce items from laboratory
equipment to solid figurines of animals and people, but few
are employed today.
Courtney was fascinated. "The real treasure here [at the
Wheaton Village factory] is in all those molds and presses.
American glass is about press molding. I'm going to try to do
something about it." He did experiment with some of Wheaton
Village's huge assortment of old press molds but he also used
simple molds of steel which he fabricated himself.
Some pieces he made were mask-like, a conscious reflection of
the artist's Native American heritage (Cherokee and Choctaw).
A symmetrical horned profile is based on the traditional
buffalo mask. "My alter ego is a buffalo," he reveals. "The
ghost dance was outlawed by the US when the Indians were
pretty well beating them. The Indians said it would chase
away white people."
Earlier in his career, Courtney made a series of successful
sculptures in which barbed wire, a linear and symbolic
element he has used often in gallery work, was partially
embedded into the shapes of buffaloes in glass; however,
market demand outlasted his interest in this imagery. "I'm
not a good gallery artist because I want to move on," he
explains. This desire for change and challenge is surely one
key to his success as in the public sphere.
Several sand-cast oval heads made at CGCA were deliberately
asymmetrical, again reflecting a type of Native American
mask. Long narrow noses divided the face, but only one
bulging eye, cast from a croquet ball, was visible. Courtney
likes the immediacy of sand casting and the opportunity to
make dramatic undercuts. He cast several pieces into aluminum
foil layered on sand. Most of the foil peeled away from the
glass, leaving behind a glittery speckled surface like a
foxed antique mirror. Considering Courtney's use of mirror
backing, this surface may be one he will attempt in a larger
project.
"I doubt that I'll take any of this stuff home," he murmured,
sorting through a pile of glass masks. And, indeed, months
later, most remain where he left them: in odd corners or
propped against the exterior wall of the casting studio. Most
residents come to the CGCA with the intention of producing a
lot of finished work to sell or of making the glass
components for objects which will be completed later.
Courtney worked consistently but without a particularized
goal. An open-ended process, a quiet introspective experience
without a crew of assistants--a freeing of the imagination
was what this artist really wanted from his residency. And
that's exactly what he got.