Bio and images
In his second resident
fellowship at the Creative Glass Center of America in Spring 2004, Dave
Walters focused on two bodies of work. One was a continuation of his
long-term interest in graphic images on blown glass vessels. The other was
more sculptural and kinetic, incorporating elements from several media in
addition to glass. These latter works sometimes resemble deconstructed human
bodies. Glass brains, livers or stomachs hang like the elements of a wind
chime—or a marionette, though not in a way which literally reproduces
anatomic relationships. On occasion, these obliquely human, mobile elements
are mounted on or in an openwork structure of forged steel.
Walters, who has worked as a
gaffer for such luminaries as Dale Chihuly and Lino Tagliapietra, is able to
blow glass into any form he desires to realize his designs. Some elements of
his kinetic works have the thin walls and mathematical precision of
scientific equipment. They endow mysterious apparatuses with a kind of
scientific authority consistent with the bilateral symmetry of biological or
organic forms organized into mechanical almost robotic systems. Are these
objects pseudo-sentient? Elaborate experiments? Charicatures of research
fashion?
Walters produces a line of
functional glass; however, he is best known for unique vessels enameled with
detailed narrative drawings which reflect his print-making background.
Mythological and biblical stories provide material for imagery which he
refocuses through a very personal prism. There are clear relationships
between Walter’s work and that of printmakers like Albrecht Dürer or the
more expressive William Blake, but two-dimesnional work on vessels also has
strong links to the tradition of Greek vase painers. Another significant
influence seems to be early Christian or Byzantine painting and mosaics, in
which the surviving Roman tradition has evolved into a powerful linear
emotional expression.
The Greek vase-painters
depicted stories of the gods in limited colors. They and Byzantine
mosaicists and other historic illustrators included text as Walters often
does. The stories Walters tells, though, often take a grotesque and surreal
turn which has earned him the soubriquet of “The male Judith Schaechter”
(the much admired stained-glass artist with a propensity for depicting
suffering, torture, and bloodshed). Unlike Schaechter, Walters works
primarily with black and white and an occasional accent color.
He wanted to put most of his
energy at CGCA into glass blowing: making vessels to be decorated with
enamels which are applied and removed by scrafitto (scratching away) or
sand-blasted after being fired. Combining additive and subtractive methods
allows him to great freedom. However, while still at Wheaton, he could not
resist experimenting with a recently acquired a pen which gives him a great
deal control for stippling.
Walters designs vessels for
specific images. He is working on ideas growing out of traditional
children’s stories. “I find they are rich with possibilities and take me
back to my own childhood—the monster under the bed.” He planned specific
shapes to go with specific illustrations. For an Alice and Wonderland Tea
Party, from a projected “Alice in Wonderland Series,” he planned a
trophy-like representation of the “Drink Me” bottle topped with a tea
pot.
His hammer-wielding Humpty
Dumpty will be self-destructive, with only a broken, teetering ladder for
rescue. “I like a tenuous relationship,” Walters admits. Buildings in his
drawings are supported on thin stems; they “look solid but are only as
permanent as what’s beneath.” Additional subjects proposed for the fairy
tale series include Jack and the Beanstalk, Hansel and Gretel, and
Rumpelstiltskin.
This artist brings his very
impressive technical skills to bear on dark but archetypal subject matter.
It will be interesting to see how—or if—he resolves his vision of the human
body depicted in his kinetic works as a mechanistic, perhaps Cartesian
entity with his more psychoanalytic graphic vision of the psyche.
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Last modified
03:44 PM 03/04/2008