Bio and images
Each piece of glass blown by Walter Zimmerman, who completed
his second residency at the Creative Glass Center of American
in the fall of 2001, is a temporal, mortal nexus. Past,
present and future weave through the broken, beautiful
surface suggesting wounds, scabs, scars, and, somehow,
survival and the possibility of growth. Fragments of material
history penetrate each layered lobe-like object, which is
simultaneously self-contained and presented as part of a more
complex whole.
Zimmerman's framing and display devices: the grubby
techno-scientific metal boxes, carts and rubber tubing imply
a Kafka-esque psychosocial context, meaningless order,
obliquely erotic and perversely humanized through apathy and
neglect. Though its core metaphors are psychological and
social, glass for Zimmerman, is always surrogate for human
flesh. He likens its lucent beauty to the confusing appeal of
color, form and texture he recognized when as a child on a
hunting trip, he was mesmerized by the gutting of a deer.
"The liver was beautiful, sumptuous," he recalls but his
child's rational mind demurred: " 'This is evil. This is
Bambi.' "
Zimmerman's handling of glass follows a ritualized sequence.
"The steps are routine. I know what's going to happen. Dance
is a good metaphor, but it isn't a solo dance. I'm partnering
the glass." However chance is decisive in this dance.
Zimmerman's "routine" produces unpredictable results. In some
ways his approach resembles John Cage's compositions for a
"prepared" piano, in which strings were randomly tuned or
stretched to accommodate objects. The outcome is both
surprising and expected.
Usually working alone, Zimmerman cossets the infant gather of
glass, often forming it into a layered ovoid resembling a
fetal sac, but just when the soft glass has grown beyond
infancy, "accidents begin to happen." It is plunged into
water so networks of cracks and fissures expose underlying
color. It's reheated and rolled in trays containing fragments
of broken glass, metal, heat-resistant fabric and small
objects including safety pins. Some adhere and others do not.
Some survive the fire, others vanish. The artist occasionally
glues together whole works which fragment during the stress
of making, mimicking the repair of a shattered life.
By embracing such damage, Zimmerman meticulously re-enacts a
story which is both personal and universal. "Everybody
suffers. Everybody is wounded. Everyone. We live in a culture
that worships the bud and the first bloom, not one that
acknowledges the whole cycle."
He incorporates the finished pieces of glass within
assemblage. Their cryptic narrative drama reflects
Zimmerman's own theatrical background. Wires, discolored
metal, corrugated tubes and other fragments of equipment
which are "discarded or used to the point of exhaustion"
deliberately allude to science and medicine. "I envy
science," he's said. "I'm aware that once science and art
were seen as the front and back of the same hand. [Today] art
has been trivialized."
Finished glass objects are supported on and connected to
mechanical fittings from many sources: gas, plumbing, and
electrical completing a grubby diorama of some abandoned
Frankenstein experiment. To Zimmerman, the once functional
settings project an aura of "protective coloration" and
"respect" around the visceral glass, but his
recontextualization also casts a shadow of doubt over the
power and supposed objectivity of the emblems of science. One
subtext here is that what as regarded as "knowledge" is
equivocal and ever-changing.
Zimmerman's ordering -- or artful disordering -- of objects
conjures up a narrative, not at a pivotal decisive moment but
in the dreary suffering following catastrophe. Perhaps his
training in art therapy helps to guide him smoothly from the
personal and confessional to a broader more communal plane.
He says "I'm fortunate in that my woundedness didn't
compromise my body and I've blundered into a situation where
I can turn and face what I experienced as deep personal shame
and use it as fuel." Although he knowingly recapitulates the
experiences of a traumatic childhood in his work, he avoids
specifics. He will never literally represent "The day the
family broke, when my brothers and father got in that big
black Buick and my mother and sister stood in their matching
pink nightgowns and waved good-bye." He detaches the
emotional essence from the anecdotal. In recognition of the
broader aspects of his work, he adds, "One of the most
painful responsibilities in life is being present and
powerless for the inevitable. Sometimes all I can do is stand
and witness."
Among the over-arching themes suggested by the damaged and
incomplete character of Zimmerman's sculpture is his critique
of "the prevailing American myths and stringent social norms.
In my work I create the (American) sense of mobility but
thwart it. We are a 'free' country but God help the person
who is different."
"My work looks bleak and many people find it discomforting,"
he muses. "I use my discomfort as a gauge. If I have a choice
I always choose the less comfortable option. BUT here's the
silly secret: I find this junk and this glass that no one
wants and put it together. This stuff is garbage I have
rescued." Just as Zimmerman subsumes his own abandoned,
wounded childhood into art which is at once visually
satisfying and emotionally distressing, he transforms
abandoned, wounded objects into poignant icons of compassion.
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Last modified
03:47 PM 03/04/2008