Bio and images
"The end result is what I aim for -- not the perfection of
'Wow, what an amazing technical feat!' " explains Beth
Lipman, a fall, 2001 Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of
America. Nevertheless, Lipman undeniably wows viewers with
the glittering virtuosity of her three-dimensional
recreations of 17th and 18th century still life paintings,
each incorporating 50 to 100 pieces of glass.
Much of Lipman's earlier work dealt with abundance and excess
and, especially, food, which she values as a "universal known
thing." An early collaboration with a fellow student combined
real food like melted sugar and jelly beans with glass images
of lobsters, bread loaves, and fish. The paintings which
serve as models for Lipman's current series, "The Still Life
Revisited," are rich with meaning and sensuous surfaces. On
one level, still life painting traditionally pays homage to
the bounty of nature, God's gift to humanity. More
superficially but inescapably, these paintings recorded the
affluent circumstances of the artist or patron who
commissioned them: fine linens, crystal and fresh, abundant
food, the stuff of life. Countering this show of vanity, many
historic still lifes were vanitas paintings, reminders of the
brevity of life, which emphasized fleeting material pleasure
as a contrast to infinite, ineffable spiritual joy.
Representations of decadence, decay and waste are reminders
of mortality. They include tipped-over wine glasses, insects
and the damage caused by them, as well as broken stems and
bruises. Split melons in John F. Francis' Still Life with
Fruit, one of the works Lipman is recreating at CGCA,
seem almost eviscerated, while cascading grapes hang like
bloody gobbets. Just as the bloom on a peach fades, so does
youth and life. These paintings remind us that though life
may be pleasant at the moment and possessions plentiful, "You
can't take it with you." Yet, paradoxically, although the
subjects of the paintings, their owners, and authors are dust
today, the represented scene remains vivid and fresh for our
contemplation.
At a third remove from the original living fruit, Lipman's
glass versions are even more ambiguous. Glass is solid and
almost imperishable, though fragile by definition. Moreover,
representing painted objects in clear glass, as she does in
her reconstruction of the Francis painting, perversely
dissolves solidity in an optically challenging maze of
reflections and transparencies. "It's about the essence of
the lusciousness of what's going on," Lipman says.
She chose the Francis piece because, John Francis
(1808-1886), the most famous American still life painter of
his day, lived and worked in Philadelphia where Lipman plans
to show this sculpture at the Mangel Gallery in early 2002.
For this show, she's also basing sculptures on works by
another important Philadelphia still life artist Raphaelle
Peale (1774-1825).
The subject of still life attracted Lipman in part because it
has always been considered a secondary or lower form of
painting -- not as elite, challenging or content-driven as
portraiture or "history painting," for example. Glass and
fiber (Lipman's other primary medium), are often considered
second-class materials for fine arts; so she sees them as
akin to still life.
Furthermore, Lipman explains, " I'm a woman working in a
material (glass) that 30 years ago a woman wasn't allowed to
touch." Her observation reminds us that for centuries
aspiring women painters were not allowed to work from the
nude (to protect their "modesty"), but still life was
considered a suitably ladylike subject and one which was not
overly challenging.
Nevertheless, Lipman's glass still lives are challenging and
labor intensive. Transcending the pejorative "crafts" label,
she presents her work as a consummate complete sculpture. In
the hot shop, Lipman works almost expressionistically,
knifing a gather of soft solid glass on the end of a metal
rod into rugged facets to suggest rather than represent
individual, life-size grapes and turning out dozens of
peaches in short order. "I'm striving for drawing in glass,
not an academic rendition but a translation of objects in my
voice and my material." She is not bound to functional
perfection when making the props like baskets, spoons and
sugar bowls. Lids lack flanges, baskets lack symmetry and
slumped spoons are a little flat. In the finished work, they
will not be handled. The carefully calculated arrangements of
glass objects are permanently mounted on tables built by
woodworker Richard McCoy to Lipman's specifications.
An admirer of outsider art, Lipman describes herself as a
"craft child," who frequently helped her mother with tole
painting and other similar projects. At one time, she
disdained the decorative "country" craft aesthetic, but now
she respects "the humility of making utilitarian decorative
objects" and freely borrows useful techniques. For example,
she painted crosshatch tole stokes in fire-on enamels to give
a basket in the Francis work a sense of texture.
The most ambitious piece she began at CGCA was a version of
Wolfgang Heimbach's Table Still Life with Maid behind a
Window. "This piece will be a summary of how I feel about
the viewer interacting with the work," she explains. The
glass fruit in the McCoy's wooden shadow box will again be
clear. In the painting, a maid behind a cracked window eyes
the fruit, perhaps covetously. In Lipman's version, the
window will be a mirror reflecting the viewer's contemplation
of her three-dimensional banquet, a frozen ghostly array of
glittering overabundance in which food and consumption have
political and social implications. Though it has plenty of
intellectual content, Lipman's sculpture is powerfully
seductive. When the viewer is literally part of the picture,
it is complete and instantly contemporary.
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02:04 PM 03/04/2008