|
Chris Duncan
Recent Work:
Drawings & Sculpture
Union College
Faculty Exhibition
January 29 - March 6, 1998

Untitled, bronze,
1996
When you look at Chris Duncan's drawings, you are confronted by
mass - you sense the physical presence of his sculpture. Yet the
drawings in this show are not preparatory sketches, they are not
preliminary exercises on paper intended to culminate in a
finished piece of bronze or steel and plaster; they are works
that stand assertively on their own. Still, these large
palimpsests, with their labored marks, insistent and searching,
and their broad planes, richly layered, velvety and deep, were
obviously wrought by hands that know volume, that shape mass.
their subject matter is a series of forms: simple, elementary,
even, solid and unadorned, yet never static. In a peculiar
off-camber equilibrium they boldly inhabit the picture plane,
unsettled and alive, graced by the refined reserve of their
author's chromatic choices and undergirded by his sure command
of the medium.
- Francis Di Tommaso, Director of the Visual Arts Museum
at the School of Visual Arts
All Or Nothing At All
bronze, 1996

Untitled
steel and plaster, 1996
Drawing and sculpture have always been related in my work. The
drawings aren’t sketches or diagrams from which to build
directly; instead they are a means to formulate and record
possibilities.
When I begin a sculpture, an underlying structure of
steel allows me to generate forms quickly and improvisationally.
Sometimes the steel alone forms the finished sculpture, or I may
add plaster and found objects over the steel. In recent years,
I’ve cast bronzes from these plaster and steel pieces.
My drawing process is similar to what happens when I make
sculpture. It requires a physical involvement, and erasing or
scraping away is as important as adding. To preserve a quality
of immediacy I often work in a series. I’m interested in how the
making process helps determine the final shape of the work.
Later I go back, edit, and fine tune.
The most recent works on paper were made during a
three-month stay in China this fall. I started off with my usual
materials-heavy drawing paper, charcoal, and so on–but quickly
switched to working with brushes, Chinese ink, and large sheets
of very thin Chinese paper. Working with these light, flexible
materials, and incorporating color, proved liberating. Drawing
with the brush was like making one of the steel sculptures, but
more immediate, and almost effortless. I couldn’t erase on the
rice paper, but I could build up many layers of line and color,
like building up the surface of a sculpture. So, some of the
Chinese drawings are like studies for sculpture, while others
read more as screens of giddy calligraphy.
-Chris Duncan,
Union College, December 1997
Head, bronze, 1997
|