German Artist Jessica Stockholder at The Saatchi Gallery
The concept of sculpture has changed so much in recent decades that most of what is currently classified as sculpture bears little resemblance to the millennia-old tradition of carved or cast figures. Practically any three-dimensional object serving a decorative, esthetic or conceptual purpose is now viewed as sculpture. The shift occurred in the 1960s, when Donald Judd argued that his planar wooden forms were not sculptures since they were neither "sculpted" nor statues. Sculpture, he proclaimed in 1965, "is finished." In the late '60s, Earth artist Michael Heizer declared that "the idea of sculpture has been destroyed, subverted, put down." But sculpture, like painting, refused to die; instead, it was redefined to include the works of the very artists who rejected it.Two major exhibitions of Jessica Stockholder's work have recently provided the opportunity to consider these issues. A new installation, Sam Ran Over Sand or Sand Ran Over Sam, was created for the Rice University Art Gallery in Houston, while "Jessica Stockholder, Kissing the Wall: Works, 1988-2003" surveys Stockholder's portable sculptures, which she calls "studio works." The latter show debuted at the Blaffer Gallery, Art Museum of the University of Houston, and opens this month at the Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, N.C. Together, the two shows offered in-depth access to this prolific midcareer artist's production, which reveals surprisingly little change over the course of 16 years. Throughout, she has maintained a consistent level of energy and formal complexity.
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Find more about Jessica Stockholder paintings, biography, solo exhibitions, group exhibitions and resource of Jessica Stockholder artist. View Jessica Stockholder artwork online at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.Jessica Stockholder