Bio and images
Danish-born Maria Sparre-Petersen wants her art to become " a
conversation between me and complete strangers." During her
Fellowship at the Creative Glass Center of America, she made
one large interactive glass installation and developed
components for future projects.
Mirrors of the Soul (1999) is typical of her work in
the way it incorporated time and the human factor.
Sparre-Peterson acquired a number of intact old windows in
wooden frames which had been discarded by a firm specializing
in replacement storm windows. She arranged the windows in a
continuous surface on the floor of her New York City studio
and invited people to walk through the space. Although she
had not suggested it, the visitors all chose to balance on
the wooden frames of the windows leaving the panes intact.
Documenting the different stages of the project with
photographs, Sparre-Petersen then removed the frames from the
panes and placed them on the floor of the studio. Now when
people walked through her studio, they were forced to step on
the glass and break it. The final stage of the project
involved carefully removing the shards of broken glass and
re-heating them. The raw broken edges were softened but the
devitrified glass lost some of its crisp translucence--a
natural process which also occurs as glass ages over many
(even hundreds of) years. Replaced on the floor, where they
had once reflected the walls of studio windows in unbroken
surfaces, and later as angular shards, the "healed" fragments
had a softened, scar-like aspect, but a new completeness.
In a collaborative performance involving social roles and
expectations, Shared Space (1999) Sparre-Petersen and
Jeffrey Sarmiento sat for two hour intervals enclosed in
individual cubes of glass connected by an arching tube. A
former cultural anthropologist, who is also trained as a
designer, Sparre-Petersen's keen interest in human behavior
is reflected in all her work, but perhaps her years as a
professional sailor on tall ships (a job she sought in order
to see the world "not as a tourist") also contributed to the
project Message in a Bottle (2000). Sparre-Petersen
enclosed messages requesting a reply in 32 blown glass
bottles. The recipients of the messages would be asked to
participate in an art exhibition.
Sparre-Petersen received several replies and was pleased that
three resulted in "fairly intimate" acquaintance with the
recipients. "One person reported finding the bottle to the
police." When a sergeant telephoned and left a message on
Sparre-Petersen's answering machine, "I was so scared," she
remembers; however, when she explained the concept of the
show to him and invited him to come, "He was really psyched."
Unfortunately, he could not participate, because the person
who found the bottle had not given him the message.
One goal for Sparre-Petersen's CGCA residency was to improve
her glass-blowing skills. Some of this "practice" is devoted
to a second "message in a bottle" project called Opposites
Attract. Sparre-Petersen initially thought of the idea
because she herself was attracted to her "opposite," an
African American man, her husband Justin. Sparre-Peterson has
made a total of eight "opposite" pairs as bottles including:
skinny/fat; all neck/all body; tall/short; little/big; and
square/round. The messages intended for these bottles will
invite the finders to come to the show and "meet your
opposite. " From her earlier bottle project, Sparre-Petersen
knows that a finder's opposite is very likely to not to
contact her or to appear at the show, but at least anyone who
finds a bottle will know "there's someone out there that has
their match. It's about that tiny little seed of hope. . . ."
She likes this type of project partly because allows her to
be a catalyst but not part of the completed work: "I'm trying
to be completely out of the picture."
Also, at CGCA, she's made a number of large bowls, "my own
form. I just love bowls. I think its the female, container
thing. The bowl is open and inviting. These are layered with
color and carved with the sandblaster. In a related project,
she plans to record the process of working with hot glass on
a wet canvas stretched over plywood. She will drip Jackson
Pollock-like trails of molten glass onto the canvas. The
burn-marks will be the completed work.
Early in her residency, Sparre-Petersen made a large outdoor
installation near Wheaton Village. She carefully inserted
rows and clusters of tall of glass rods delineating the
perimeters of puddles of water in a field where she likes to
walk. Wind and soft damp ground caused the rods to lean like
stalks of some oddly translucent, glittering weed. Puddles
Elevated ostensibly helped the artist avoid getting her
feet wet; however, at least part of the purpose was to place
non-traditional art in a new environment--to provoke an
unmediated response . "In a gallery space, people come in
with expectations. They say, "'That's really fabulous,' but
it isn't a dialogue. Here they are surprised in a positive
way and you get a dialogue. It's more connected to real
life."
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Last modified
03:37 PM 03/04/2008