Bio and images
Watching Simone Fezer at
work brings to mind her observation “Glass blowing has a lot to do with
rhythm. It’s a dance. I enjoy it because of the immediacy and intensity, the
roundness and elegance in the movement. You can’t force it. You have to have
a strong intention and you have to have clarity.”
“Perhaps,” the Winter,
2004 Resident Fellow of the Center for Creative Glass in America
acknowledges, “I call glass-blowing a very female activity because I’m
female.” She finds a primordial source of strength in the process, likening
the manipulation of molten glass to “rebirth, rejuvenation: the phoenix
theme. The furnace produces a deep roaring sound. The glass is like magma at
the center of the earth: very strong and very fiery. What happens on the way
to making a piece of glass reveals a truth that suddenly starts making
sense.”
Fezer’s individual
sculptures often suggest botanical or biological sources. At slightly over
two feet long Heart (of a Pink Ladyslipper) is a sinuous, nearly
symmetrical mottled pink form studded with irregular rounded bumps. It hints
at a real anatomical heart or, more likely, a juicy over-ripe fruit with a
thick undulating stem. The iridescent viscous-seeming surface could be torn
from a living body or something diseased and pustuled but graceful
nonetheless. Unidentifiable and surreal; it is, nevertheless, convincingly
of nature.
For the German artist,
truth is both empirical and intuitive. “Science
is the illusion of rationality. It answers to itself and makes sense like
any religion.” Fezer has a wide-ranging interest in mythology. From the
Indian triumvirate of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva to Lilith and Morgana le Fey,
she is drawn to “the oldest questions. I love the poetic descriptions of
ancient life; each river, each tree would be a god.” A trio of 2002 works
combine huge seven foot diameter wreaths with centralized linked symmetrical
glass elements suspended across each ring. These forms are abstracted
representations of the female reproductive system: uterus and fallopian
tubes, but the “uterus” can also be read as an egg cradled in a pair of
hands. The interior sequencing of cool, hard, reflective, slightly
translucent glass objects contrasts dramatically with their heavily textured
exterior nests. Aspects of the
goddess-white- is wreathed in downy feathers: light, soft, nurturing.
Aspects of the goddess-black- is framed in coal: rough, earthy,
heat-giving. Aspects of the goddess-red- incorporated 700 roses:
fresh, tender, sensual with, perhaps, a hidden thorn. Fezer evokes something
atavistic with these contrasts. It is simultaneously bone-hard and
protective, heroic and fragile, eternal and evanescent as a blossom.
The egg shape, “a symbol
of life,” has many references. Fezer makes it in blown glass to capture
light and suspends it in installations in nylon tubing (from stockings). She
is primarily an installation artist. Untitled (inbetween) is an
interwoven suspension of very large blown glass eggs, capturing light and
color and inviting the viewer to move among the forms. Perhaps because she never attended art school, Fezer
is comfortable shifting from one material or technique to another and uses
both cast and blown glass. “I’m about the piece. I’m about the result. I’m
definitely not going to make it hot if I can make it better
cold.”
Flesh and Spirit,
bound circling is a mold-blown spiral 26 inches long and a foot in
diameter. The painted nylon covering sections of the clear glass loops
resembles raw flesh. It represents “the striving for transcendence. We have
to accept our physical existence, accept our reality because it’s beautiful
to be on this planet.” But, although the forms are elegant and the colors
almost pretty, the effect is visceral, painful. There’s an ambiguity, a
duality which inhabits all of this artist’s work.
She wants “to ask
questions with my work—not to give answers. I’m trying to reach people on
the level of the heart, not the intellect. Beauty is one of those truths
that is a question. In all religion you have a dark and a light—or a heaven
and a hell—or whatever you call it. Trying to
move toward the light and bring the light, reaching for the divine. We can
never really reach the [complete beauty of nature] but we can capture
moments of being in nature and feeling connectedness, a glimpse of light:
the hush of a butterfly, the silence of a field.”
Created by
admin
Last modified
01:47 PM 03/04/2008