Bio and images
“[S]eductive yet
repulsive:” The New York Times’ oxymoron is a melodramatic description
of Tim Wagner’s kiln cast sculpture, yet
it captures some of its fascination. The Winter 2005 Resident Fellow at the
Creative Glass Center of America makes work that seems not so much
contradictory as ambiguous. On occasion that ambiguity can be disturbing.
Wagner, who has a BFA from Tyler School of Art, Temple
University and an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University, is
sensitive to materials and to the mysterious cross-pollination which occurs
when you represent one material through another one which is very different.
He has written,
“Glass is brittle, fragile, hard, and dense; so by representing hair and rope
as glass, I work to create a dichotomous experience that speaks to the
character of both materials.” Sometimes the shapes these materials—real and
represented—assume suggest physical danger. A rope, for example, suspended
vertically, almost inevitably suggests hanging, knots, and binding, though its
material character is the opposite of glass: flexible, soft, and fiberous.
Although Wagner
verbally describes rope as potentially comforting or supportive, I believe that
his rope trope is more ambiguous, threatening, and context dependent. The first
rope-like work he made was a cast of human hair. The hair piece (actually what
old-fashioned ladies would call a “switch”) duplicated a long braid of his
wife’s hair which she cut off and gave to him soon after they married. Hair is
an archetypal material suggesting both vulnerability and menace; eroticism and
coarsness; the imprisoned virginal Rapunzel and Victorian mourning jewelry. A
glass rope or braid of hair is authentically dangerous, a fragile and
threatening lance-like form.
Wagner’s interst
in knots and the splicing of rope extends the rope metaphor beyond cultural or
functional roles to the idea of relationships in a broader human context. These
sorts of distinctions and complexities are embodied in the best of his work,
which tends to be formally elegant and reductive.
Trial
and error typify his process. “I like to work. I work by instinct. I don’t like
to think too much,” he explains. He typically uses latex casts to produce wax
positives and telescopes some steps in the mold-making process. He says,
“Sometimes the end result changes along the way, but I tend to get the results
I want, so I’m happy.”
He
currently lives in Washington, D.C. where his wife (“My best friend and closest
confident” and a profound influence on his work) attends law school at George
Washington University. In nearby South Virginia Wagner made a mold of a large
tobacco leaf which he duplicated many times in order to assemble a punning
“Smoking Jacket.” He deconstructed a real sports coat to obtain the pattern
pieces which he completes with “real” veined and textured leaves . Wagner is
interested in representing the smoking jacket as the symbol of a “ritualistic
male event.”
The
complementary female garment is a sort of Southern Belle Cinderella skirt which
will be assembled from layered casts of a broom. Sections of skirt are cast in
flat wedge-shaped gores, composed of pyramided flounce-like broom heads. The
“fabric” will later be slumped to produce appropriate fullness. Currently,
Wagner imagines displaying both these garments on especially designed metal
frames accessorized with items of real clothing: a shirt under the jacket and a
peticoat under the skirt, real cloth which will be visible through and at the
edges of the clear glass.
The
potential of building a flat patterned mold is also present in a strip of tire
tracks Wagner cast directly from a highway. The ultimate use of these is to be
determined, but like the “Cinderella Skirt,” they could be assembled into a
flat sheet which is later slumped into a more articulated form.
Although
at CGCA the garments were cast in clear glass, Wagner frequently uses black
glass (colored with black marbles), especially for the hair and rope pieces. He
also planned to take advantage of the hot shop at CGCA to work with blowing
glass into molds (including one of barnacles) instead of exclusively kiln
casting. He hoped to make casts of balls of trash retreived from the garbage
and of dust pans and brushes and to make “Tobacco Lungs” from tobacco leaves.
“I came here with a [to do] list,” he acknowledged. “It’s grown and shrunken. I
will make as many parts here as possible and put them together in D.C.”
Created by
lluttrell
Last modified
03:43 PM 03/04/2008