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Catherine
Lee
Clad Works
30 October - 19 December 2008
Catherine Lee’s works are like a hybrid of painting, sculpture
and installation. The works on display in this exhibition range from
small single wall pieces to large standing ‘Clad’ forms – rested
imposingly against the wall and standing 2.5 meters high. Made of patinated
bronze, copper or a traditional Japanese clay called Raku – their
material is as significant to Lee as their form.
This exhibition includes 5 large ‘Clad’ works in which
steel, copper or Raku tiles are screwed over a wooden armature. Lee
patinates the metal with an extremely painterly effect making the work
seem at once like painting and like sculpture. The work seems solid
yet light and the outline of each shape becomes as important as the
substance within. The cracked glaze of the fired Raku emphasises the
sense of random order and the relationship between the predictable
and unpredictable, between artistic control and the lack of it.
Although her works seem systemised – in the instance of Outcasts
Water Iron 21 identical cast iron shapes parade over 9 metres of wall
space – their form often disrupts our expectations of geometry
and symmetry.
Also on display are a selection from Lee’s Alphabet series on
which she has been working for 22 years. They are individual shield-like
sculptures in which the titles – but not the forms - are related
to places that the artist has visited. This series, also made from
patinated bronze or Raku ceramic use subtle colours and textures.
Cathy Lee was born in Texas in 1950 where she lives and works. This
is her third one-person exhibition at Annely Juda Fine Art. Over 29
works are on display - indicating her use of different media and scale
to an impressively harmonious effect.
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