Bio and images
The
figurative glass sculpture of Isabel De Obaldía, a Winter 2006 fellow at the
Creative Glass Center of America, ignites an explosion of associations. Glass
is glass in De Obaldía’s work. Its fragility becomes a metaphor in De
Obaldía’s typical deconstruction of the figure into torso and limbs, sometimes
suspended and sometimes mounted on a stand. The curving idealized forms De
Obaldía chooses suggest both Classical statuary and dolls or puppets, perhaps
sacred lay figures intended to be dressed in identifying garments. The absence
of a head and fragmentation of the body in many of these works recalls the
time-honored revenge of the victor: the obliteration of the enemy’s personal stamp
on a culture’s art by removing or damaging his or her head, literal defacement.
It could also reflect a knowledge of old dolls, the kind with china heads and
limbs.
But, ultimately, the absence of a head
gives rise to a sense of depersonalization. In addition to fragmentation as
wounding, there is the sense of a universal being. A 2004 figure without head,
feet, or arms is covered with relief images of eyes. Missing much that is
unique and individual, it remains tragically heroic and projects the essence of
the human struggle, of human history.
De Obaldía chooses minimal
gender-defining characteristics, though the over-all effect of the figures
seems to be masculine and youthful. Shoulders are broader than hips and the
chests of the mannequins are deep, like that of a Greek kouros figure. The
waist is athletic but not excessively narrow. On occasion a minimal loincloth
is outlined, but genitalia are rarely noted. Such details are not essential to
De Obaldía’s vision. This generalization would be consistent with the idea of
an articulated religious lay figure which would ordinarily only be seen clothed
in real clothing.
The artist’s original decision to make
the figure in sections was a practical one: it is very difficult to kiln cast a
life-size figure, but she has made an expressive virtue of this necessity. A
series title like “Fragmentos de Guerreros” tells us that some of De Obaldía’s
figures are soldiers (guerreros), young men whose bodies are all too
expendable. Men can be treated as little more than dolls moved about the map in
a game of war.
“Transfiguraciones” (2003) has a more
animistic and mystical quality, as De Obaldía integrates plant or other symbols
with the body. Frequently color is
embedded into the glass De Obaldía uses this simple and direct vocabulary to
evoke historic and religious associations.
The headlessness of these figures
implies a universality beyond that of an individual portrait. In addition to
reminding us of ancient works which have been beheaded for political reasons,
there is an even more base reason for the missing heads on statues in museums.
Often they were removed by 19th or 20th century
plunderers for sale to collectors. The head is more portable than a whole
statue, and the most marketable part.
The second most marketable part of an
old statue is the hands. The hands of the Buddha, with their delicate mudras
or symbolic gestures, have frequently been severed and sold. It is easier to
destroy religious images when the religion is not one’s own. Although De Obaldía
frequently omits hands, arms or feet of figures, on other occasions, she
displays only limbs, suspended like ex votos.
A 2001 series composed exclusively of
torsos seems to suggest a literal transformation from human into another
internal animal or vegetative form. De Obaldía has described the simplified
shapes as “almost a canvas on which I could explore possibilities of colors and
textures.” Both leaves and feathers cover some figures and the arms of one are
becoming wing-like. Another is covered with green cactus-like spikes.
A successful painter for many years,
De Obaldía became involved in glass around 1989 when she left Panama to
distance herself from the unstable political situation, though she also was
passionately involved in Panamanian politics. The highly expressive figures she
painted can be reminiscent of the work of Leon Gollub, though the messages are
less pointed. Figurative, expressive and surreal, they share many elements with
her sculpture, including the headlessness of some figures and other physical
distortions; however, the strict, rather static frontality of her sculpture is
a step away from her paintings.
At Pilchuck in the late 1980’s, she
had contact with Libinsky and Brychtova, and other pioneers of large-scale cast
glass. She likes the transparency of big chunks of glass and the possibility of
placing colors and images in the interior as well as on the surface.
De Obaldía continues to rely on
sketches in planning her work. “I think that it is very important to be able to
draw. To express yourself through your sketches.”
In
Panama she is restricted to kiln casting, in which the mold based on a clay
positive is filled with glass pieces and heated to a melting point. At the
Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center, she began a new series which she has been
planning for a year in which she will sand cast using hot glass (something
which is not possible anywhere in Central America she says). The forms will be
cylinders based on recent excavations of third century BCE “Estatuas de Barriles,”
barrel-shaped statues found in the province of Chiriquí. She’s also inspired by
pre-Colombian sites she’s visited in Mexico and Peru and wants to treat the new
castings as pieces of stone which can be stacked and formed into a structure.
But not all De Obaldía’s ideas come
from the past: she is considering using light as an element in these finished
works. She’s also moving into cast heads which may be integrated with the
structure.
While she says, “I love history. I
love reading. I can absorb from everything,” De Obaldía is thoughtful about the
ways she allows older works to inspire her work. She recognizes a danger in becoming too
“folkloric” or succumbing, as well known glass artists have done, to the
popularization of “junky” imagery which does not fully respect the tradition.
“I have
enough stuff from my own culture to feed on. I’m very keen on the body and
exercise and like that. The thing that I love about sculpture right now is that
there is much physical work to do.”