Only a Brief While Here

56

description

Only a Brief While Here

Transcript of Only a Brief While Here

Page 1: Only a Brief While Here
Page 2: Only a Brief While Here
Page 3: Only a Brief While Here
Page 4: Only a Brief While Here
Page 5: Only a Brief While Here

O N L Y A B R I E F W H I L E H E R E

Page 6: Only a Brief While Here
Page 7: Only a Brief While Here

Ana Mar ia Pacheco

O N L Y A B R I E F W H I L E H E R E

Page 8: Only a Brief While Here
Page 9: Only a Brief While Here

I, Netzahualcoyotl, ask this:

is it true that one lives on the earth?

What is it that has roots here?

Not forever on earth,

only a brief while here.

Although it were jade,

it will be broken;

although it were turquoise,

it will be shattered

as if it were just quetzal feathers.

Not forever on earth,

only a brief while here.

Netzahualcoyotl (1402-1472)

Page 10: Only a Brief While Here

J O U R N E Y S

T H E E N C H A N T E D I S L A N D

Y O U R T E A R S W I L L B E W I P E D A W A Y

Studies for relief sculptures in bronze, alabaster and wood

The studies in this book are preliminary explorations of ideas for a series of painted relief sculptures that Ana

Maria Pacheco will execute in three different materials: bronze, alabaster and wood. They are painted in tem-

pera with a wash of oil, and some include the use of gold and metal leaf.

Pacheco has made reliefs in the past. In Brazil she produced a large historical tableau and more recently has

explored aspects of Brazilian myth in Portland stone. While Associate Artist at the National Gallery, Pacheco’s

contact with early, pre-Renaissance Italian painting put her in mind of reliefs and rekindled an interest in con-

fronting the challenges of working between two and three dimensions, and using colour. These studies for her

new reliefs show a continuing engagement with themes that have preoccupied her throughout her career.

Pacheco has used the metaphor of the journey since the early 1990s to consider aspects of what it is to be

human: our passage from birth to death (and beyond); the nature of our drives and impulses; the workings

of imagination; our venturing into the new, the strange; our understanding of self. The studies for Journeys

represent various strands of this theme. A young girl, very like the innocent figures in In Illo Tempore I and

plate III of the Terra Ignota drypoints, steps aboard a small boat, guided by a woman holding a candle. She is

at the start of a journey to an unknown land. Odysseus, on the other hand, knows exactly where he is bound,

but on the way is lured by temptation in the form of a siren, here a curious dragon-like creature of the sea.

He is determined to undergo the experience of temptation but takes the precaution of being tied to his boat.

In another study, a young woman hurtles through the air astride a panther that conveys her to realms of ecstasy,

as other wild animals have in Pacheco’s world. In the late 1990s, Pacheco became interested in the journey

that the Queen of Sheba made to Solomon’s kingdom. Here the Queen travels on a camel, whose sly glance

seems to imply he knows more about their destination than she does! They journey across the desert beneath

a star-spangled sky to the meeting of superpowers, different in culture and sex. In the final study of this series

a ghostly figure, protected by a snake spirit, passes from our world to the next through a door of fire. He

reminds us of those figures on the prow of the boat in The Longest Journey, who seem to act as mediators for

the travellers on whatever their journey may be. These reliefs will be cast in bronze.

Page 11: Only a Brief While Here

The Enchanted Island is inhabited by bicho (wild animals) that Pacheco recalls from her Brazilian childhood.

Their world is reminiscent of the world of A Modern Bestiary, an artist’s book on which Pacheco collaborated

with the poet George Szirtes. Pacheco has constantly confronted us with our animal nature: people in her

work wear animal masks, have paw and claw-like hands and feet, show a wild excess of teeth. Some of the

bicho in The Enchanted Island slumber or play among the jungle leaves; an egret seems to offer a man a means

of escape – or is he having fun at the man’s expense? A winged bull flies through the sky trailing a rope ladder

that floundering humans try to grasp; deer dash through the air but one of their number, rooted to the earth, is

pierced by arrows, shot by an invisible assailant. Here are the exuberance and tranquillity of paradise, depicted

in a flat, pre-Renaissance space. But this is a paradise that we are denied, as we deny and become estranged

from the animal within us, losing in the process our ability to deal with it. Alabaster will be the material for

this series. Its comparative softness allows for the rendering of fine detail.

An inevitable, one might almost say necessary, part of our journey through life entails suffering. This has

been a constant in Pacheco’s work, dating back to the early trilogy of sculptures, Exercise of Power, Banquet,

Acrobats and continuing through to the monumental installation, Dark Night of the Soul. In many of these

the instigators of suffering are present, and in some cases it almost seems that the victims are colluding in their

fate. (Are the acrobats grimacing or grinning?) However, the print Study for St Sebastian, leading up to Dark

Night of the Soul, prefigured a development of the theme that is depicted in the final series of studies, Your

Tears Will Be Wiped Away: the compassion that suffering engenders. The wings of the ethereal comforters, as

much as instruments of flight, look ready to envelop the sufferer in tender embrace, like the rounded forms of

the women in the Study for St Sebastian. The comforters ease the pain and convey the sufferer through this

transient phase to the next stage of his journey. The images in this series will be considerably larger than the

others to increase the emotional impact. They will be carved in wood, the most transient of the three materi-

als and the one most closely associated with suffering.

Robert Bush

Page 12: Only a Brief While Here
Page 13: Only a Brief While Here

J O U R N E Y S

Page 14: Only a Brief While Here
Page 15: Only a Brief While Here
Page 16: Only a Brief While Here
Page 17: Only a Brief While Here
Page 18: Only a Brief While Here
Page 19: Only a Brief While Here
Page 20: Only a Brief While Here
Page 21: Only a Brief While Here
Page 22: Only a Brief While Here
Page 23: Only a Brief While Here
Page 24: Only a Brief While Here
Page 25: Only a Brief While Here

T H E E N C H A N T E D I S L A N D

Page 26: Only a Brief While Here
Page 27: Only a Brief While Here
Page 28: Only a Brief While Here
Page 29: Only a Brief While Here
Page 30: Only a Brief While Here
Page 31: Only a Brief While Here
Page 32: Only a Brief While Here
Page 33: Only a Brief While Here
Page 34: Only a Brief While Here
Page 35: Only a Brief While Here
Page 36: Only a Brief While Here
Page 37: Only a Brief While Here
Page 38: Only a Brief While Here
Page 39: Only a Brief While Here
Page 40: Only a Brief While Here
Page 41: Only a Brief While Here

Y O U R T E A R S W I L L B E W I P E D A W A Y

Page 42: Only a Brief While Here
Page 43: Only a Brief While Here
Page 44: Only a Brief While Here
Page 45: Only a Brief While Here
Page 46: Only a Brief While Here
Page 47: Only a Brief While Here
Page 48: Only a Brief While Here
Page 49: Only a Brief While Here
Page 50: Only a Brief While Here
Page 51: Only a Brief While Here
Page 52: Only a Brief While Here
Page 53: Only a Brief While Here

Plates from a series of nineteen studies

Printed in archival inks on

Hahnemühle Natural Art Duo 256gsm

Text set in Bembo

Edition of 19

Each book is accompanied by one of the original studies

in oil and tempera on paper with gold and metal leaf

(each approximately 25.5cm x 20cm)

Text by Robert Bush © 2007

Edition number

Printed and Published

PRATT CONTEMPORARY ART

2007

Page 54: Only a Brief While Here
Page 55: Only a Brief While Here
Page 56: Only a Brief While Here