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A
Curatorial Vision
Michael
A. Tomor, Ph.D.
Executive Director
El Paso Museum of Art
Topographies:
Three Decades of Realistic Sculpture by Carole A. Feuerman highlights
three dimensional works in resin by this New York City artist. A
trompe l’oeil sculptor who has devoted her career
to visualizing the human condition in super-realism, Feuerman’s
contemporary approach forges historical links with the past while
revealing her compelling vision for the future.
Feuerman’s sculptural tradition can be traced to the second Century
bronze and chiseled marble busts of Roman aristocrats, religious leaders,
and politicians. The evolution of objective figurative portrayals in
three dimensional sculptures was later revived during the European
Baroque period by sculptors like Gianlorenzo Bernini. The tradition
was continued by Jean-Antoine Houdon, the great sculptor of the 1 8th
century Enlightenment, as well as by the 19 century Neo-Classical sculpture
of Antonio Canova The immediacy of expression of the Impressionists
led sculptors such as Auguste Rodin to reevaluate sculpture in terms
of personal vision, setting the stage for new approaches to three dimensional
work in the 20th century and for the emergence of the United States
as an international center for innovative experiments in sculpture.
With the advent of expressionism in late 19th century, end 20th century
abstraction that continued through the 1960s, naturalism in the rendering
of the human form was temporarily overshadowed. However, during the
1960s Pop artists, including Andy Warhol, Jim Rosenquist, Jim Dine,
and Claes Oldenburg, redefined naturalism n terms of consumerism. Pop
Art images were usually direct, literal renderings of commonplace objects,
such as soup cans and Brillo boxes, arid this new realism encouraged
other artists to pursue their naturalistic inclinations in art.
It was during the 1970s that Pop Art made Realism legitimate again,
and it was during that time that three American sculptors were inspired
to revisit the traditions of the past. Working independently of one
another and with unique vocabularies and contemporary mediums, Duane
Hanson, John De Andrea and Carole A. Feuerman returned to the three
dimensional world of figurative sculpture. Each was inspired to create
life size and lifelike sculptures of the human form embellished with
accessories, such as hair, clothes, and a variety of props. Their work
at this time was not only visually exciting but an effective commentary
on contemporary life. Each artist rendered the genre through an objective
rather than an expressionistic approach. Commentary on the social condition,
including the tangible realities of war and the abstract ideologies
of emotions like passion and pain, inspired each to visualize the world
in terms of personal experience.
Feuerman’s interest in Realism and objectivity, fidelity of form,
and truth of expression and depiction is indicative of the artist’s
formative desire to recreate the human body. Through her sculpture
Feuerman has created portraits of ordinary people in everyday situations
that possess a universal appeal. Whether it is a woman in an inner
tube at the beach, a singer in front of a microphone, or a child playing
baseball, Feuerman’s realistic depictions make her work both
accessible and familiar Best known for her ability to recreate the
illusion of water droplets and perspiration, Feuerman has traditionally
been known for images of bathers and athletes.
Although she labors over-preparatory sketches and life drawing, Feuerman
uses direct casting to replace three-dimensional maquetts, and she
spends most of her time duplicating the essence of her models in paint.
Clothing, teeth, pores, wrinkles, and skin color are meticulously rendered
by the artist to give the viewer the impression of a living, breathing
human being. Renowned as the originator of realistic life-cast figurative
sculpture, and as an innovator in the technique of creating three-dimensional
water drop imaging, her works are not merely casts of real human bodies.
Feuerman’s resin sculptures are stereotypes and generic, each
expressing an aspect of her life. The coloring, poses and environments
of each sculpture constitute the artists individual comments on the
human condition. Her interest in realism will always bring Feuerman
positive critical review and continued success.
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