Bio and images
Angus Powers, a Summer 2003 Resident at the Creative Glass
Center of America, maintained an area of his studio as a sort
of installation in progress, experimenting there with
different arrangements of objects and lighting.
Although he made several types of objects in glass, many on
the blowpipe, Powers came to the CGCA with one stated
objective: the utilization of some of the many historic iron
moulds belonging to the T.C. Wheaton Glass Factory. Powers,
who began blowing glass in 1998 at Alfred University, and
jokingly describes himself as "a pyromaniac," incorporated
many such cast pieces in a series of substantial blown glass
columns, to each of which he attached 15 to 20 cast elements,
radiating like branches. The finished vertical structures
tend to read as organic--plant-like, perhaps cacti. In
several, flattened stylized hands with a mechanical almost
art deco character extend from the trunk, palms up as if
begging. In a related series, Powers applied large relief
medallions depicting the profile head of a classical helmeted
warrior-- or perhaps an astronaut--to the columnar forms.
With the help of assistants in the hot shop, he made a number
of these ornamented columns using the current batch color,
but the final method or context for presenting the completed
columns was not determined during his residency.
Images of men, particularly men's heads, depicted in a
variety of ways, occur frequently in Powers' work --though
toy-like animals (often cast from real toys) also appear. As
in the medallion stamp, male faces are treated as emblematic,
emphasizing generic features rather than portraiture or
expression. The various sources for this imagery all fall
within the category of media-based communication: cartoons,
advertising and similar quasi-decorative patterns or
pictographs.
Using an Italian brass stamp for the features, Powers makes
small translucent heads on the blow pipe, coloring the hair
yellow, the skin pink and applying well-defined eyes and a
tiny blond goatee resembling his own. The caricatures become
smiling Howdy-Doody caryatids in the stems of elaborate
goblets. Clear bowls rise above their curls. Their pink necks
emerge from elongated hollow tear-drops containing a few
small colored beads which emit a shower of festive notes when
the glass is raised. The glass heads are surely
representations of Powers himself, though paradoxically--or
perhaps consequently--they read as "everyman," with eyes open
wide in eternal bemused wonder.
"I made the goblets for myself. It's nice to use your skill
to make something for yourself, but although I think
functional work is valid, I'm more interested in sculpture,"
Powers says. One current series is almost two-dimensional.
Although he claims not to be especially interested in
representational drawing, he utilized an illusionist
technique on sheets of zicar, a refractory material which can
be cast. Embedded in thick blocks of glass, each white sheet
appears to be a piece of lined paper with holes punched for a
three-ring-notebook. A face in relief is subtly cast in the
center of the zircar sheet. It might pass unnoticed except
for the horizontal lines which cross it. These were executed
in graphite which is impervious to the heat of molten glass.
Continuing with his exploration of stereotypical male
imagery, Powers made molds from square-jawed soldier doll
heads -- four different heads but all in the same scale, part
of the same line of toys. He cast them in multiples as
dehumanized battalions of soldier heads, integral to flat
blocks of colored glass about 14" x 20". He also cast larger
blocks of dark blue "Moontiles" into moulds made from
Styrofoam carved to resemble the lunar landscape.
Powers envisions using both types of block in yellow, dark
green or blue glass as platforms or pedestals in assemblages
with basket-ball-size blown-glass elements. These vessels,
some with flared bases, others with a rounded bottom, can be
displayed half-filled with water. Floating inside or
suspended in the neck of the vessel are human figures or
translucent stylized chickens with skinny legs, bright yellow
bodies and red beaks. At least one of the spherical vessels
has a solid-worked globe mounted on a column at its center.
Executed in blue and white, it represents the earth as seen
from space.
In his studio, Powers stacked pyramids: perhaps a dark
Moontile on the bottom with a green army tile above
and, resting uneasily above that, a bubble-like round vessel
half filled with water. Lighting alters these works. When
illuminated from above in a darkened room, the military heads
are visible in silhouette, while open areas between them feed
light upward into the enclosed sphere. Water warmed by the
heat of a spotlight, begins visibly to circulate. Suspended
elements bob slightly as vapor sweats onto the shoulders of
the vessel. These intriguing experiments did not yield a
final definitive configuration for Powers, but presented
options for further research.
Powers plans to incorporate electric turntables, Astroturf
and even viewer interaction in the presentation of these
installations. Perhaps the "earth" will rotate in and out of
the light. Powers' presentation is gleeful and playful, an
open-ended enactment. "I like humor because it's accessible,"
he says. The juxtapositions which emerge have a vigorous if
obscure narrative quality. Like fragments of animations, they
transmit a sequence of recognizable signs or, at least,
communications which we feel we ought to be able to
recognize. Sometimes they suggest the opposition of great and
small, a familiar story in which the "hero" is a dehumanized,
miniaturized cipher. Like the quintessential kid in a candy
shop, Powers marvels at the possiblities. "I like putting
these together. It's exhilarating to deal with a complicated
challenge."
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Last modified
03:29 PM 03/04/2008