Bio and images
"Everything can be seen in two's: partnership, cell
division--most everything!" Robert Gardner, a winter, 2002
Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America tends
to think in terms of pairs, pairs in the sense of dyads not
dichotomies. Even the solid glass spheres, reoccurring
modules in his sculpture, are bipartite, cast in hemispheres
which are later joined.
The steel and glass piece that he mounted on the wall at the
entrance to his personal studio is a poignant example of
linked pairs. A memorial to the events of 9/11, it literally
illustrates the concept of fragility and figuratively
recognizes the delicate balance of stability, the necessary
but fictional bubble of complacency within which we all live.
The symmetrical sculpture consists of a central steel
pendulum encaging three cast glass balls. The heavy weight is
suspended on the wall between a pair of vertically-mounted,
transparent manufactured cylinders--glass pipes--symbolizing
the World Trade Center towers. Any passer-by could shatter
those pipes with a flick of the wrist. It's almost tempting
to see what would happen if the pendulum were set in motion.
A feeling for imminent narrative often inhabits Gardner's
sculpture. A fan of Duchamp and Dada, he is sensitive to
social cues in art. As a side-line, Gardner makes custom
light fixtures for architects, an exacting occupation that
perhaps gives him an exaggerated idea of "perfection."
It's a quality which he says he does not seek in his art. "In
glass, I'm not drawn to work that's very clean, pristine,
overly-worked and doesn't seem to have any life."
Nevertheless, Gardner's own sculpture, while far from
lifeless, has a high degree of finish; a crisp sense of
order, which some might find akin to perfection.
For work completed before the CGCA, glass spheres and other
simple geometric shapes were sand cast and finished with
exacting, time consuming cold working, the glass artists'
bete noir. Gardner has often ground the curved surfaces into
a field of tiny polished facets, very beautiful but
painstaking. "I don't like cold working, but the effect is
sometimes worth it," he admits. At CGCA, he experimented with
a shell mold process which will facilitate lost wax casting
and minimize cold working.
Gardner's 2002 residency at CGCA was really a return. He
originally came to the center as a glass novice, a shop
assistant to William Bernstein, who did a master residency
around 12 years ago. Now he is a master himself, executing
his own ideas. "Glass is not a lot different from candy,"
Gardner suggests. He likes to play with the subtleties of
luminosity. Light penetrates each half of cast hemispheres
differently. Sometimes in his work, the distinction is
enhanced by the addition of color either glazed onto the
surface or melted into the glass. His attention to the
effects of light and shadow, expressed in his fabrication of
light fixtures as well as his personal work, is surely a
carry over from his early interest in film and television.
The quality of the sky and sea and the dramatic architecture
of Miami Beach where he was born also contribute to his
artistic vision. "It's the magician in me: I like the idea of
transforming sand into something magical. I stop short of
shaman," he jokes.
Today, though glass and metal are primary, he is eclectic in
his choice of materials. "When there are things I want to
say, I'm totally experimental." A large American flag in
black and white rubber was part of a recent installation
completed at the African American Community Center in
Asheville, NC, where Gardner lives with his wife and
daughter. The whole project explored the semiotics of public
communication, especially as it relates to children. He
notes, "Most sinage in America asks for your trust and
safety." Available free to exhibition visitors, a series of
fluorescent stickers admonished them with childhood rules
such as, "Don't climb on top of other people" or "Don't
Bite!" Each idea was illustrated on the circular sticker with
curious literalness. "Scissors are for paper ONLY!" featured
a hand silhouette with a severed index finger.
More directly related to his CGCA work, is a series based on
repeated vessel-like solid forms housed in metal carriers or
shelves. By covering the bottom of the glass pieces in gold
leaf, Gardner creates the illusion of some luminous fluid
suffusing the "bottle." He also places hardball-size "candy
drops" in steel baskets or confines them inside heavy black
wire chutes. Although the pieces are geometric and orderly,
he envisions them as an extension of nature. "I'm not
attracted to works that don't let nature in. We live in
technology: our lives, car, house. . . . We are nature. It is
inside of us. Our technology is very disconnected from us.
When I use metal I want it to be soft and have a fine
surface. People have often said that they really like to
touch my work."
Yet as we see in Gardner's fondness for suspended forms, he
enjoys interrupting a natural law like gravity, perhaps
because intervention attracts attention. Glass cones hanging
to one side of a chain illustrate gravity's absolute
character by disrupting what would be the pure verticality of
a plumb bob. Throughout Gardner's work we find an oblique
homage to the manipulation of nature which is the basis of
art making and human society in general. Gardner quietly
explores that unmarked territory between natural and
unnatural, recognizing perhaps that the two are another
inextricably joined pair.
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Last modified
01:50 PM 03/04/2008