Sunday, November 22, 2009

Francis Cape Artist Lecture





Two of the above images represent the current installation titled "Waterline" currently on exhibit in VCU's Anderson gallery.

This lecture by sculptor Francis Cape began with one of his last graduate works involving cardboard boxes arranged on palettes concerning the transport of goods and their delivery methods equalized by the often present containers. His back ground is in wood work and fine restoration of several hundred year old wood work in his native England. Cape spent sometime discussing how we see and go through the process of seeing to sharing what we have seen as artists. Through his work with historic structures a key component of his work is the idea of the transience of objects. In the work Waterline and several other works within a similar vein he presents wood reproductions of the mass made "utilitarian furniture catalogue" a series of home furniture and storage pieces produced within England during world war II paired against photographs from Post Katrina New Orleans. In his piece Waterline the waynescoat represents the waterline found in the middle class neighborhoods he was shooting in. More images form Katrina and the waterline referred to in the installation are framed and hung above about head height. He works seeks to comment on the universality of the destruction caused by Katrina, it did not only happen to the most poor or the most rich but ot everyone within it's landfall.

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