Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

Barely tangible horizontal and vertical vectors: the physics of daisy chains

AA
View Discussion

This substantial loop made of hundreds of joined up (pressed) daisies, held aloft by over fifty glass stanchions, is a sight to behold. It is not optically spectacular - though it is beautifully understated and extremely fragile - but it is a clever idea.

Christchurch


Zina Swanson

The risk of it all falling apart

 

29 April - 24 May 2009

 

This substantial loop made of hundreds of joined up (pressed) daisies, held aloft by over fifty glass stanchions, is a sight to behold. It is not optically spectacular - though it is beautifully understated and extremely fragile - but it is a clever idea. As a sagging ‘chain fence’ it mimics in its contours the floor plan of the large Physics Room gallery. Each of the thin transparent stanchions that keeps it in place is perfectly vertical, one end v-shaped to hold the thread of linked stems, the other firmly screwed into a hole drilled into the stained wooden floor.

This work however is more than structure. Its obsessiveness is part of the appeal, the nuttiness of its prolonged and exhausting labour - like say Wolfgang Laib and his jars of collected yellow pollen, the repetitive, cursively written sheets of the late Hanne Darboven, or the paintings of Roman Opalka with their painted rows of tiny numbers - only less extreme. Swanson’s is only for a single show, not a lifetime’s career.

By cordoning off the centre, the inner space of the gallery, Swanson creates a pathway around the edges, containing her audience and pressing them against the walls when they back away from the delicate barrier. The length of the frail chain is precisely judged so that its load-bearing ability is not pushed too far. As it dries it seems to become stronger and not brittle.

Swanson’s exhibition is quite wonderful in the way it takes a childhood game to create a sculpture of considerable psychological power. Hopefully word will get round so it gets the appreciation it deserves.

(Photos courtesy of the artist and Mark Gore.)

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Denis O'Connor, I for Inklings, 2024, pigment, wax on Welsh slate, 245 x 195 mm

Angling for Resonances

TWO ROOMS

Denis O’Connor

 

Lucken’s Alphabet

 

4 July - 9 August 2025

JH
Ruth Cleland, Concrete Floor 4, 2925, acrylic on board, 60 x 80 cm.

Pebbles, Oblongs & Reflections

SUMER

Ruth Cleland


Concrete


11 June -12 July 2025

JH
Cerith Wyn Evans, installation view of Cerith Wyn Evans at Michael Lett.

Cerith Wyn Evans at Lett

MICHAEL LETT

Cerith Wyn Evans

 

Cerith Wyn Evans

 

14 June - 12 July 2025

JH
Joyce Campbell, The Giant Rock, LiDAR photogravure

Unnerving Campbell

TWO ROOMS

Joyce Campbell

 

Dream Diary

 

23 May - 28 June 2025