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CONTEXTS

Nancy Rubins

Nancy Rubins is famous for making monumental, at times colossal, sculptures out of the salvaged remnants of America's industrial and consumer past. (Rubins & Paul Kasmin Gallery, 2001).  

Chas' Stainless Steel, Mark Thompson's Airplane Parts, About 1,000 Pounds of Stainless Steel Wire, 2001, Stainless steel and airplane parts
25 × 54 × 33 feet (7.6 × 16.5 × 10 m)

There is an inherent tension in all her sculptures, which are compositionally arranged to show a certain precariousness and fragility. This is quite the juxtaposition for what is essentially very solid, heavy objects. These gravity defying structures, produce a feeling as if one is looking over the precipice or edge of the world where something is about to happen. There is something very exciting about this mound of detritus which is frozen, suspended in time, like a memorial of America's material legacy. 

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 Drawing, 2005. Graphite pencil on paper, 134 x 379 x 12 inches. Courtesy of Gagosian Gallery

In a similar way, I am particularly drawn to the way her sculptures, especially her paper graphite works, expand outwards using the whole of the space. She imaginatively contemplates how to bring the walls, ceilings and other less common elements of exhibition spaces into perceptual play. I am likewise really inspired by the monumentality of her large paper works. It shows the potential of paper and what I could possibly do with different scales in my rubbings. I additionally find the intense graphite sheen, shiny like the surface of polished metal and the way that affects the audience in space, an influential component to develop in my own work with large graphite paper rubbings. I appreciated seeing a little of the white behind the graphite paper, it felt like a white highlight, flitting with the idea of revealing something hidden beneath.  

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Drawings, 2000. Graphite Pencil on Paper 84 x 118x 36 cm

I wish to emulate a more total utilisation of space, especially more uncommon spaces like corners or ceilings. I want to try and find that tension, that feeling of fragility in the arrangement of sculptural elements at more ambitious scale using a fragile material, as she does, for my large-scale rubbings. I am still influenced by the Liv Preston show that thought about how to disrupt space in novel formulae. 

References

Rubins, N., 1952-, & Paul Kasmin Gallery. (2001). Nancy Rubins : sculptures/drawings. New York, NY : Kasmin,. 

© 2022 By Tom Harper

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