Bio and images
When Kipling tells us that ". . . Rosie O'Grady and the
Colonel's lady, are sisters under the skin," he means that
women are all alike. Yet his claim arises from an opposing
pragmatic observation: the certainty that everyone in a
culture can visually distinguish a lady from another kind of
woman. Although many subtle differences of appearance and
behavior contribute to our assessment of an individual, our
primary way of identifying one person as a lady and one as
not is by evaluating what sociologists call clothing
tie-signs and tie-symbols. A tie-sign, such as a wedding
dress or school uniform, identifies the wearer as a member of
a specific group or category. A tie-symbol like cowboy boots,
which are worn by many people besides cowboys, suggests
affinity with a belief, attitude or group.
Clothing is an indicator of roles and behaviors. For
centuries, the restrictive character of Western women's
clothes, from stomachers, corsets and crinolines to hobble
skirts--even the dubious liberation of mini-skirts--has
provided metaphorical evidence of social restrictions on
women's freedom. But clothing is also a canvas onto which the
wearer projects a sense of beauty and personal identity.
In recent decades, artists have exploited the disjuncture
between the meanings embodied in clothing and the individual
identities of women. Contrary to Kipling's dictum, women may
be sisters in some regards, but unique--in ways that have
nothing or everything to do with clothing--in others. The
classical life-size glass sculptures of Karen LaMonte, a 2002
Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of American,
address this paradoxical zone--the space between individual
being and constructed appearance-- in a wonderfully literal
way. With a specificity akin to Rachel Whiteread's negative
architectural castings, LaMonte records the territory between
a woman's naked skin and the surface of her clothing, a
feminine swirl of draperies, ruffles and "bows on the butt."
Through its transparency, glass reveals the contours of the
body and of applied couture simultaneously. Kipling's
putative subject, whatever lies beneath the skin, has
vanished like a ghost or a cicada from its shell. The empty
body is housed in clothing, perhaps imprisoned in it--just as
it is housed within its own skin. LaMonte has said, "Apparel
radiates its wearer's physicality like a discarded shell or
an outermost layer of skin. It is our second skin, our social
skin." By specifying the contours and postures of a real
human body beneath the skin of clothing, LaMonte addresses
age-old issues of ideal physical beauty and its relationship
to other personal qualities. Distortions imposed by fashion
and art are manifested at least through implication. The
culturally and historically pervasive belief that perfect
symmetry and beautiful proportions reflect beautiful inner
qualities is challenged by these works which are beautiful,
but do not conform to archetypes of beauty which LaMonte
terms "absurd."
Clothing is a kind of vessel or container. From the
perspective of Western aesthetics, LaMonte's work
intriguingly, though probably not intentionally, addresses
the vessel tradition, a conflicted topic for contemporary
glass artists. Glass sculptors often feel defensive about
making objects which might be functional because in the West
functional objects are assumed to lack the potential to
express serious ideas. However, LaMonte's large scale
sculptures are literal vessels, hollow objects of glass. They
could even be characterized as vessels for vessels (women).
The reproductive female body has often been compared to a
vessel, usually with the implication that the vessel is of
less consequence than its contents. The punning relationship
between glass vessel and maternal vessel suggests a humorous
parallel between the relegation of the female "vessel" and
the glass vessel to second class cultural status. Both
categories are purposeful; they are perhaps decorative or
aspiring to beauty but, alas, intrinsically incapable of
profundity.
LaMonte's sculptures might also be described as glass houses,
fragile records of human dwelling. They make no pretense to
be other than glass. Glass is intrinsic to their meaning.
LaMonte loves glass because "it seems alive and flesh-like,"
but she also feels that it tends to make the exaggerated
subtle--so subtle that she must exaggerate the character and
spatial drama of the fabrics she records. LaMonte casts in
clear crystal which maintains a stable relationship to form.
"I'm very sensitive to color so I intentionally avoid it in
all my work."
Each dress is a kind of portrait. In choosing dresses to
cast, she says, "I'm looking for a hyper-feminine cliched
look: rows of ruffles and bows on the butt. I try to make
sure every dress has a bow." In addition to understanding the
sculptural possibilities of the bow's butterfly form
(narrow-waisted like a horizontal female torso) and trailing
ribbons, she has internalized the cultural possibilities.
It's no coincidence that LaMonte currently executes her
large-scale work in the facility which produced what are
often identified as the first studio glass sculptures, made
by the team of Libinsky-Brychtova. LaMonte developed the
complex techniques for her castings while on a Fulbright in
the Czech Republic working at Pelechov, the glass casting
facility of Zdenek Lhotsky in Prague. Libensky and Brychtova
continue their relationship with Pelechov.
Together LaMonte and the skilled technicians at the factory
developed techniques unique to her sculptures which weigh up
to 600 pounds. The process, "a cross between cooking and
plastic surgery," incorporates refined improvised adjustments
which LaMonte jokingly calls "czechnology." Although she
"enjoys the science of casting," LaMonte says, "At the end of
the day, I'm more of a creative thinker [than a technician]."
The figures are made in several sections which are later
joined. LaMonte casts the bodies of real women, including
herself. She places a mold made from real clothing around
these human positives, invests the whole and fills the
interstices with hot glass. The vanished female body in
LaMonte's sculpture is a "given" which determines the gross
form of the completed sculpture--just as living bodies
determine the gross forms of apparel.
For now, LaMonte must execute her major work in the only
facility capable of producing it -- in Prague. She came to
CGCA with the intention of making small and medium-scale
pieces in series and pushing herself to work with objects
outside of clothing. She brought a collection of perhaps
eight or nine hand mirrors to CGCA, asking herself, "How can
they become messengers?" After completing only five large
pieces in a year in the Czech Republic, in six weeks at CGCA,
she made numerous rubber molds, an intermediate step in a
lost wax casting process. She can easily ship the lightweight
molds to the Czech Republic. She also cast several versions
of each mirror in lead crystal, though she sees the entire
serial project taking quite a bit of time to complete.
In contrast to the scale of a human figure, the mirror is a
hand-size object. LaMonte feels that silvering the mirror
surface would be "too perfect." Instead, she seeks a low
sheen in glass. She experimented with placing a ripple or
wave like a gathered section of fabric on the crystal
mirror's non-reflective center panels. Perhaps these folds
can be interpreted as references to clothing and drapery,
which LaMonte has also cast. ("Drapery is like the cymbal
crash at the end of a symphony: very rich feeling and
peaceful.")
There are human echoes are in the decoration of the frames
and the handles. LaMonte would like to place an inclusion
representing reflected lips inside the mirror and mimic
condensed breath on the surface of the glass with opaque
powdered glass. The relationship of visible breath to the
trail of smoke from an extinguished candle causes her to
recognize this as a memento mori. "I don't think I'm
particularly morbid but I find over and over that I use
images and then find that they're death images." Similarly
the absent figures in dresses can be interpreted as ghosts.
Death is ever present in life.
LaMonte collected a number of women's dresses from sources
such as a local Goodwill store but she saved these for later
investigation. In terms of casting garments, at CGCA she
confined herself to children's clothing which she covered in
wax. LaMonte is far from exhausting the expressive
possibilities of clothing and her own technical audacity.
She's already made mono-prints and cyanotypes of clothing.
She plans to cast men's garments one day.
One afternoon, LaMonte spoke of climbing to see the world's
largest outdoor Buddha in Hong Kong. The figure was
invisible, shrouded in mist until she was very close. Then
"the outline became clear. It was a sort of visual epiphany,
an ooh-aah experience. I think that's the challenge to the
visual artist: that for a moment the viewer is thrilled,
puzzled or -- ." She pauses contemplating a visual experience
that defies language. Quite often LaMonte's sculpture does
achieve this transcendence, this sublimity, a moment in which
technical and metaphorical issues disolve into simple,
overpowering recognition.
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02:03 PM 03/04/2008