Articles
- Ursula von Rydingsvard: Galerie Lelong
by Emily Hall - Ursula von Rydingsvard: Dieu Donné
by Ann Landi - Ursula von Rydingsvard: Lelong
by Nancy Princenthal - From Head to Hand: Art and the Manual: Sculpture and Sanctuary
by David Levi Strauss - The Sorceress of Cedar
by Alexandra Anderson-Spivy - Ursula von Rydingsvard Sculpts Metaphors in Wood
by Avis Berman - Massive in scale, intimate to the touch
by Eleanor Heartney - Topography of the Soul: A Conversation with Ursula
von Rydingsvard
by Jan Garden Castro - Prime Cuts
by Ann Landi - Ursula von Rydingsvard
by Benjamin Genocchio - Green Party: A spiffed-up Madison Square Park gets the kind of summer visitors that New Yorkers actually like.
by Mark Stevens - Ursula von Rydingsvard: Primitive Jarring
by Grace Glueck - Timeless Psychological Forms: A Conversation with Ursula von Rydingsvard
by Jan Garden Castro - Fighting With The Monsters That Fill Her Studio
by Avis Berman - Stasis and Agitation
by Janet Koplos - Urban Exercise: Stretching the Definitions of
Outdoor Art
by Roberta Smith - Sculpture as Refuge
by David Levi Strauss
Ursula von Rydingsvard: Lelong
by Nancy Princenthal
The consistency in Ursula von Rydingsvard’s practice is deceptive. Her signature use of commercially milled cedar beams, chain-sawed with remarkable delicacy into cubistic surfaces that are further modulated with finer cutting tools and with graphite, is long-established. But an increasingly broad formal and associative range is revealed by the five sculptures in her recent exhibition, which variously evoke clothing and domestic objects, geological formations, written language, classical figuration and a single, ferocious beast.
The last takes the shape in Droga (2009), which, at approximately 10 feet high and 18 feet long, lurked menacingly in the gallery’s side room. The head it lowered toward the entering viewer was incipiently horned, the body tensed on muscular haunches. Diagonal cuts in the wood thrust its mass forward. Without obvious transition, it became, midway, a cresting wave surging in the opposite direction: Hokusai in carved wood. The clifflike Blackened Word (2008), implacable wall to Droga’s unopposable force, presents dark, brooding surfaces that undulate into narrow crevasses. Installed rather close to the gallery’s longest wall, it created a narrow, visually uncomfortable corridor—an organic variation on Serra’s steel traps. The meaning of the title would be visible only form above, where one could discern (with difficulty) that the nearly 7-foot-high wall is configured in the rough shape of a word (the artist declines to specify it) written in von Rydingsvard’s native Polish.
The cryptic template for Blackened Word is anomalous only in its literalness. Von Rydingsvard’s sculptures are frequently motivated in part by memories both personal and cultural that are neither apparent nor, really, important for the viewer to know. But a deeply shadowed, fundamentally unknowable core- often alluded to in titles- can be felt as the physical and metaphorical heart of much of her work. Moja (2010) is a columnar, quasi-figurative form that tilts toward classical contrapposto while sustaining the belligerence of Rodin’s Balzac, its gnarled surface both a ravaged face and a clenched fist, and in either case a door tightly closed on an inner void.
Two works hung on the wall, one, Splayed (2009), a virtuoso turn at draftsmanship in wood. Describing a nubbly smock, it features apron strings that flutter joyfully upward, binding no one. As overbearing as Splayed is light, Unraveling (2007) is a top-heavy work that spanned a large wall. Near the ceiling was a cluster of deep cedar basins; those that spilled below decreased gradually in depth and portentousness, eventually melting into delicate tracery. Von Rydingsvard’s language may be familiar, but her fluency in it is a continual wonder.
Art in America. October 2010. 180-1.