Bio and images
“I’m a very political
person. I think about politics a lot, but I think of the driving force [of society] as cultural.” Resident
Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America in Spring 2004, Ben Wright
has traveled quite a bit. He visited Haiti, Kenya, and Jamaica with his
father, a doctor with the World Health Organization and as a child, learned
that different cultures value different things. When he gave toy Matchbox
cars to other children in a Kenyan farm village, he was surprised that his
playmates thought these toys were superior to their handmade wire cars which
he found “amazing.” In his recent sculpture, Wright explores how society
establishes and protects what it values.
Since graduating from
Dartmouth College with a biology degree in 1998, Wright has pursued a career
as an artist The value and definition of security was the basis of his
recent BFA exhibition at the Appalachian Center for Craft. Using the eye,
really, the eyeball as an emblem, Wright looked at the way “security” has
become a pervasive element of our lives. We are almost always under someone
else’s eye, metaphorically and literally, and many find comfort in this.
“What are we giving up for ‘security’?” Wright wonders.
More like a thematic show
than an installation, many individual works from Wright’s BFA show are
iconic in form as well as intent. The influence of African sculpture is
evident in symmetrical, geometrical shapes and the repeated title “Guardian
Figure.” A jewel-like, red-brown glass head dotted with small eyes is
surmounted with a wire structure supporting eyes which resemble satellite
dishes. In contrast, a huge translucent bag hanging from the ceiling bulges
grotesquely with grapefruit-size glass eyeballs. In a wall-mounted row,
individually framed eye spheres are each surrounded like fetishes with
feathers. In making the many oversize glass eyes for the show, Wright
realized that the more detail he included, the less convincing the image
was. In the whimsical Missed Media, which in some ways is the most
memorable piece in the show, a dangling light bulb illuminates a large
door-size panel of grey Formica sprinkled with a plastic galaxy of 20,000
googly eyes.
The most ominous “eye” in
the show is an authentic surveillance camera, one of the “Guardian Figures.”
Friends of Wright’s recently moved into a community where constant
surveillance is a selling point. Wright actually stole one of the video
cameras mounted on the light posts, an act of deliberate irony.
Moving away from the eye
motif, at CGCA Wright returned to his original interest in two-dimensional
art. He has been engraving drawings onto slumped slighted tinted sheets of
plate glass using techniques learned from the Czech engraver Jiri Harcuba.
At CGCA, he worked on television-related glass screens. He is impressed with
the power of television (another kind of eye), which he saw infrequently as
a child. “That glass screen is a big Pandora’s box.”
He plans to reproduce a 1947
police scene (yet another “Guardian Figure”) on a screen within an arch-like
frame and sketched screens for back projection to distort some
two-dimensional representations. Wright calculates these graphically dynamic
images to operate effectively in the “liminal space where we take in
information as opposed to the narrow focus” of everyday life.
Like many CGCA fellows,
Wright planned to spend most of his time at Wheaton Village making glass
components which might be worked later. “The portion of time I spend blowing
objects compared to the time I spend (engraving and cold) working them is
miniscule, but I rarely have access to a hot shop so I’m taking advantage of
it. I want the shape of the vessel to bring meaning to the object.” In a
less conceptually rigorous mood, Wright finds satisfaction in making
functional glass. He is one of the rare individuals who enjoys cold working
and finds it meditative. At CGCA, a group of large functional bowls were
destined to be surfaced with ground-down faceted areas in the battuto
(hammered metal) style, and he made numerous vessels as vehicles for images.
He began a series of snuff
bottles which, when complete, will address addiction—“value at it’s most
skewed.” Fear is the emotion which he speculates drives addiction. Chinese
snuff bottles are traditionally painted from the inside, and Wright plans to
add a metal spoon, as in a traditional snuff bottle. His reverse paintings
will deal with the negative value: “What are people scared of?”
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03:46 PM 03/04/2008