Lee Bontecou's Brave New World
A star of the 1960s art scene returns with a triumphant exhibition of futuristic works
- By Paul Trachtman
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Bontecou was using new imagery to make a statement as old as art itself, about what she calls “the wonders and horrors” of nature, technology and the human heart. “Look at the stealth bomber,” she says. “It’s a beautiful thing up in the air, a piece of sculpture! But what it does is horror!” She sees its duality as a metaphor for all of us, for human nature.
A few days before her exhibition opened in Chicago, Bontecou showed up to look at the installation and repair a couple of hanging sculptures damaged during the move from Los Angeles. A petite woman with gray hair and a pixie grin, she sports the same pageboy haircut and blue jeans she wore on the pages of LIFE magazine 40 years ago. At the museum, she fit right in with the installation crew, picking up some pliers and tape from a tool cart and inserting loose wires into their ceramic connectors. Some of her constructions are so complex that even Bontecou occasionally goes blank for a moment, pausing to ask herself, What was I doing over here?
She is a meticulous craftswoman, and her work has always left the traces of its making exposed—all the stitches, scorch marks, twists and windings of wire. When one of the crew showed her a tray of glues and pastes used in conserving artwork, Bontecou studied the labels and asked for something else. “See if you can find that paste used by plumbers,” she said. “Plumbers,” she repeated, “not electricians.” Having lived in the country all those years, Bontecou knows how to fix things. The crew was impressed. “We’re really enjoying working on this show,” said Brad Martin, who supervised the installation. “Here’s an artist who actually makes her own work. That’s really old school! A lot of contemporary artists don’t know how to do that.”
Bontecou worked on the larger of her new sculptures for more than ten years, building each of them outward from a ceramic core suspended from the rafters of her barn. “As I add things on,” she says, “I see how it will float, or fly. It grows, and I fight and fight, and sometimes it just won’t come and I want to throw bricks! Then, if it sits around long enough, I just see something and off it goes. And then it starts taking over and I’m not even in there.”
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Comments (1)
Its with great joy that I find this article. Two days ago I read updated myself on Bontecou by reading about her in a book I recently purchased. The book is entitled "Originals: American Women Artists. Its written by Elenor Munro.
I was fascinated to read Lee's account of sinking into waste deep mud along the sea coast. In Munro's book Lee speaks of the marvels of motherhood. But she referenced it so indirectly that while reading the above and learning of her daughter, (now in her 30's) I felt I was privy to Lee's private thoughts. She seems reclusive and genuine. I am now as appreciative of her as I am her work. Im so happy she had the foresight to pull away and hone her craft.
Now I know I must have the oversized book that I pulled from the shelf of Barns & Noble five years ago. It entrigued me then...Im still entrigued by Lee Bontecou
Posted by Kevin Stewart on October 17,2011 | 09:43 PM