Bio and images
Influenced by William Blake, St. Francis and the architecture
of Christianity and Buddhism, Josh Dopp, a Summer 2002 Fellow
at the Creative Glass Center of America, devoted most of his
residency to a series of abstract sculptures based on natural
forms. He wants these works to invite contemplation. The cast
and painstakingly hand finished works, specifically allude to
the Taoist reverence for nature as a model for human behavior
and embody the ancient "spirit of stones" which inspires the
use of curiously-shaped mountain-like stones in traditional
Chinese gardens.
Much of Dopp's earlier cast glass was inspired by
architecture. His "Arcade Series," which was related to an
interest in the ideal proportions of Romanesque churches,
lent itself to installations emphasizing the modularity of
the arch form. It also playing with the negative/positive
relationship between the arch opening and the solid wall.
Cut out doors and windows to make a room,
but it is in the spaces where there is nothing
that the usefulness of the room lies.
Therefore,
Benefit may be derived from something,
but it is in nothing that we find usefulness.
Attributed to Lao Tzu
The empty arch allows passage from one functional space to
another. Aesthetically in a building and a sculpture, it
becomes a module which can be arranged in different ways to
make a finished work of art. In Drifting Intent from
1999, Dopp stacked arcades while in Four Bowed Boat,
he integrated a dome with arched supports at the center of a
flower-like base. Dopp says that he tries to pare his
architecture-related sculpture down to a form that is
calming.
At CGCA, the calming forms took the curving biomorphic
configuration of clouds or rocks or clusters of bubbles: all
analogies with vague landscape references. It is, however,
the surface of these forms which most engages Dopp
intellectually, meditatively and laboriously. He applies one
of two textures to the works in this series. One, a flow of
rivulet-like grooves follows the curves of the form and
suggests bark as well as water. The second, a dense field of
small cupped divots often reads as an optical illusion of
raised bumps.
The artist sculpts the soft clay originals with wooden tools
which he carved and applies a texture which will be further
refined in glass. A plaster mold taken from the soft clay is
used to cast the solid glass. Dopp then painstakingly refines
the surface: grinding, polishing, sometimes sand-blasting,
until it uniformly absorbs and reflects light. Sometimes the
effect is satiny, sometimes grainy. In photographs and even
when seen directly, small concavities covering the object may
appear to be positive bumps, an intriguing illusion. On
occasion, Dopp applies a shallow linear texture to these
fingertip-size depressions .
Surrounded by the textured surface, small "windows," as Dopp
calls them, are points of unique interest. The flat lenses
are ground and highly polished to allow the viewer a glimpse
inside the object. Like little portholes, they disclose a new
light-filled, almost aqueous world. "When you get close, you
have to leave your comfort zone. It's like Dr. Who's magic
house," he suggests. "[The lens] looks small on the outside
but when you get inside, it's huge." The reverse interior
face of the surface is both revealed and distorted. In some
sculptures, Dopp has concealed, or rather, embedded a swirl
of contrasting color which floats mysteriously, almost like a
fetus in the womb.
The experience of one of these gentle sculptures, with its
hints of nascent life, is a softly undulating contrast to the
mechanical/organic blown glass and metal collage the artist
made two years ago, before the son whose happy pictures
decorate his studio walls was born. The symmetrical
Expecting (2000) may possibly have an autobiographical
origin. It appears to be a glass model of fallopian tubes
attached to a metal robotic uterus. It suggests the
supra-human controlling power (and potential dangers) of
childbirth.
Expecting is compatible with Dopp's contemporaneous
architecture-based works. The current biomorphic series
presents contrasts with both ideas. It operates on a level in
which humans identify with and accept nature. The grid-based
symmetry and hard edges of earlier pieces have give way to an
asymmetry in which one point of view segues into another,
privileging feeling over logic. This was a conscious decision
on the artist's part. "One reason I started this body of
work," he explains, "is that this form is very forgiving."
Appropriately, his slow process of refining and finishing the
work has a similar meditative quality.
At CGCA, Dopp cast pieces in several colors including a
dichroic rose/purple which shifts from bluer to pinker
depending on the type of light which illuminates it. He also
cast numerous smooth untextured abstract works like clusters
of spherical and flattened ovoid bubbles. These range from
small objects easily fitting into one hand to larger, more
vertical trunk-like pieces, perhaps 18 inches high. The
jelly-like color and clarity of these objects sometimes has a
molten, flowing character emphasizing the glass medium.
Dopp has not entirely abandoned architecture as a source. He
cast a series of slab-like elements suggesting both sections
of an arch and monolithic stone circles. Nevertheless, his
chosen source of inspiration has shifted from the building to
the garden, from the works of man to the works of nature. His
recent sculpture expresses a deeper level of human and
tactile engagement. Human figuration is implied through the
softness and flexibility of glass "skin," though the human
body is never represented. The references to weathered,
natural forms also link to ancient art traditions. It's an
intriguing direction for this young sculptor.