Richard Bottwin
Bildhauer, Maler,
Objekt-Künstler
*1950, lebt und arbeitet in New
York
Born 1950, lives and works in New York
CAPTURING DIMENSIONS
Vernissage Samstag, 20. März 2010 12 - 15 Uhr
Opening Reception Saturday March 20 12 am - 3 pm

Der in New
York lebende Künstler Richard Bottwin arbeitet in seinen neusten Werken mit
massiven Holzplatten und Acryl bemalten Holzoberflächen. Die teils parallele
teils asymmetrische Anordnung der Bauteile zueinander verleihen Bottwins Objekte
ein Gefühl der Bewegung und Unruhe, welches den statischen Holzplatten eine
Leichtigkeit und Dynamik verleiht.
Architecture and functional objects inform
the vocabulary of the New York artist Richard Bottwin’s work. The planes of the
birch plywood sculptures, folding inward, parallel to each other, or lying flat
against the wall, change alignments and seem to move as one walks around them.
The surfaces, laminated with wood veneers or painted with acrylic colours,
reveal surprising shapes and patterns with shifts in the viewer’s perspective.
A sense of disorientation, implied
weightlessness and the element of surprise is created by the reductive forms and
subvert the modernist vocabulary of the simple constructions.
Artist's Statement:
”In my
work I enjoy creating paradoxes and unexpected relationships that reveal
themselves during the visual progression around the sculptures. Using a
vocabulary of forms that refer to architecture, my intent with the wall pieces
is to present something apparently straightforward and predictable. Then I like
to subvert the initial perception with the inference of kinetic activity and
weightlessness. The sculptures are painted with primary colors that have been
pushed to be slightly "off." Barely perceptible violets are laid down under
dense blue glazes. Yellows push toward green or orange. Reds may have a violet
or orange cast. The desired result of this manipulation of form, color and
gravity is an experience that is at once slightly disorienting, amusing, and
mysterious.”
Richard
Bottwin
Selected
Exhibitions /Ausstellungen (Auswahl)
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2010 |
Art Forum Ute Barth, Zürich
OK Harris Gallery, New York, NY
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2009 |
Minusspace PS1/Museum of Modern Art Long Island City NY Fall-Winter 2008-9
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2008 |
Pentimentin Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
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2007 |
Installation, The Sculpture Center Long Island
City, NY
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2006 |
Metaphor,
Brooklyn, NY
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2005 |
Counterpoise, Pentimenti Gallery,
Philadelphia, PA
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2003 |
At Present, Pentimenti Gallery,
Philadelphia, PA
San Francisco Art Fair, San Francisco, CA
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2002 |
Ideal Abstraction, Pentimenti
Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
Anti-Gravity, Robert Pardo Gallery, New York, NY
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2001 |
Summer Show, Gallery Joe, Philadelphia, PA
Substance, Neoimages, New York, NY
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2000 |
Bridging The Gap, Empire-Fulton Ferry State Park, Brooklyn,
NY
They're Square..., Pardo Lattuada Gallery, New York, NY
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1999 |
Bernadette Salvage Fine Art,
Brooklyn NY
Object & Landscape, d.u.m.b.o.
arts center, Brooklyn, NY
Size Matters, Gale Gates et al., Brooklyn, NY
Group Show, Gale Gates et al., Brooklyn, NY |
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Publications /
Publikationen / Weblinks
posted MINUSSPACE
March 5th, 2010 http://www.minusspace.com/tag/richard-bottwin/

Richard Bottwin, Facade #5, 2009
Wood, Acrylic Paint, Textured Acrylic Sheet
15 x 15 x 4.5 inches
“Brent: As a sculptor you work fairly pure, neither adorning
pieces with mounts nor placing your presentations on pedestals. If a “work” sits
on the floor and only grows to somewhere around or below the knees, well, that
is where it sits.
You suspend. In this case the body becomes very aware of its own mechanisms;
how it values weight, position; how this operates within the sense of the
temporal.
Smaller scale: The eye moves in and latches onto visual sensations that
convince, though also deceive. And while no guesswork is needed to place the
vocation in the realm of the sculptural there is a question to whether the form
adds more, or if there is more to what there is?
Richard: My very early freestanding sculptures, although
stable, looked like they were always about to fall over. Now I strive to make it
very difficult to get a vertical fix on what you’re looking at. Walk around them
and any expectations you had during your first scan will be subverted. Some
recent pieces create a slight sense of anxiety in my gut when I look at them.
Not a panic response exactly, more fun than that. Confronting a human-scaled
construction that is standing on the floor, does engage the body of the viewer
as you suggest. In contrast to this, I have found that the import of gravity is
not such a big deal in small, pedestal size pieces. Maybe that’s why I moved
them to the wall and used them to explore other issues long ago.
I’ve always been suspect of the conventional “modern art” solutions to
gravity; Sculpture on a pad, sculpture on a stick, sculpture on a hidden pad (underground)
and sculpture hanging on a wire doesn’t interest me. I like things to stand
alone, solidly on the ground without artifice. Recently, I’ve been very
conscious of wanting the things to stand in a thoroughly inevitable way, like
junk casually left on a construction site. This allows the environment to
intrude upon the sculpture and the sculpture to engage the environment.
The environment may be the “More” in your question. I’d like to have several
sculptures in an installation working together, or, a single built environment
one can enter that remove the viewer from this reality. I’ve always been moving
toward architecture and have brushed up against it a few times. I feel like I’m
collecting information to eventually build a pavilion or a “house” of some sort
again as I did a few times in the past.
One vice I have is a passion for the decorative. For a brief period, around
20 years ago, I threw 22k gold leaf on my sculptures and sometimes glazed it
with color. I learned a lot about pigments and transparency that way and then
got over it. Now, I employ that love of decorative surface to create allusions
to functionality. Veneers make the sculptures look like furniture and that
confuses expectations. Figuration in a veneer also initiates visual activity
that I can play with in the form of the sculpture…”

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