Eric Johnson (sculptor)

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Eric Johnson
Eric Johnson, San Pedro artist.jpg
Eric Johnson, sculptor, San Pedro, California
Born1949 [1]
Nationality American
Known for Sculpture
Movement Post-minimalism
Website ericjohnsonstudio.com

Eric Johnson (born 1949) [1] is an American sculptor.

Contents

Johnson is known for pieces crafted from wood, fiberglass and resin with a "sleek and smooth" finish. Many of them are inspired by scientific images, with titles like Watson's Wand, Reimann's Redundant Collapse and Hawking's Holes, referring to the discovery of DNA structure by Watson and Crick, the mathematics of Bernhard Riemann in the General Theory of Relativity and descriptions of black holes by Stephen Hawking. [2] [1]

Johnson's work is associated with Post-Minimalist movement, which eschews the minimalist insistence on closed, geometric forms in favor of more open forms. Much of his past work was influenced by the Finish Fetish style, which achieves sensuous colors and pristine surfaces by using resins, automotive paint, plastics, and fabrication processes adapted from the industrial world. [3]

Early life and education

Johnson was raised in Burbank in the San Fernando Valley, some 15 miles from downtown Los Angeles. [4] He attended Los Angeles Valley College, then California Institute of the Arts, and received his Master of Fine Arts degree from University of California at Irvine, graduating summa cum laude. After graduation, he became a studio assistant to Tony DeLap and later to and Craig Kauffman [5]

He has lived and worked in San Pedro, California since 1996. [6]

Criticism and Commentary

Art critic Leah Ollman, writing in The Los Angeles Times, has described Johnson's composite resin and wood sculptures as "sleek and smart", comparing their forms to those of Brancusi, and mimicking the "geometries underlying space, time and forms of life." [7]

Writing in Artweek, Neil Kendricks described Johnson's works as "coldly sensuous" despite their aesthetically pleasing arrangement of forms. He goes on to say that "the work doesn't just rest on a formal idea of icy, detached beauty" and notes that each sculpture holds space as though "marking the territory of an absent human presence." [8]

Art critic Roberta Carasso paid tribute to the scientific inspiration for these works, saying, "With resins that originated in the aerospace and automotive industries, Johnson attempts to portray galactic concepts – parallel universe, redundant collapse, and black holes." [9]

Artist and writer Kay Whitney said in Sculpture Magazine that Johnson's "materials—with their constant contrasting of the organic and the synthetic, their cycling through transparency/opacity—create a space of tension between visible and invisible. The play between what’s perceived and what’s concealed gives the objects a tactile embodied richness." [10]

Exhibitions

In 1999, Johnson's work was part of a four person show at the Angels Gate Cultural Center, San Pedro, CA, titled, Material Men: The Medium is the Message. [11]

In 2023, Johnson had a one-person show titled, Madame X, at the William Turner Gallery, Santa Monica, CA [12]

His work was exhibited in a two-person exhibition in 2017, Eric Johnson and Peter Lodato, [13] and in 2024 in the Light Matter: Art & Science Collide, show, both of which were held at the William Turner Gallery, Santa Monica, CA [10]

In 2025, his work was included in the group exhibition, Moment of Perception, at King Studio, Venice, CA, [10] and in the same year, in Beneath a Shared Sky, at the Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles, CA [14]

Public collections

Johnson’s work is held in public collections, [12] [ better source needed ] including:

Awards and citations

References

  1. 1 2 3 Groshong, Kimm (10 July 2005). "Where Art Meets Science". Pasadena Star-News. p. A5.
  2. Pincus, Robert L. (23 September 1999). "Space and Time". San Diego Union Tribune. p. Night & Day section.
  3. "Art Picks of the Week". LA Weekly. 14 November 1996. Retrieved 5 July 2025.
  4. Melrod, George (November 2012). "Artist Profile: Eric Johnson". Art LTD.: 78–79. Retrieved 22 June 2025.
  5. "Eric Johnson Studio". Artist's website. Retrieved 26 July 2025.
  6. Paris, Melina (9 October 2024). "San Pedro's Ranch". Random Lengths News. Retrieved 6 December 2024.
  7. Ollman, Leah (2 November 2004). "The double helix". Los Angeles Times. p. 67. Retrieved 1 January 2025 via Newspapers.com. Johnson's versatility is on impressive display in this selection of his work
  8. Kendricks, Neil (November 2000). "Eric Johnson at Simayspace at Arts College International". Artweek. No. 11, vol.31. p. 22. Retrieved 22 June 2025.
  9. Carasso, Roberta (June 14, 2001). "Constructive artist ponders universe". Orange County Register. p. 22.
  10. 1 2 3 Kay Whitney (21 February 2025). "Moment of Perception". Sculpture Magazine. Retrieved 27 March 2025. Johnson is inspired by a wide range of influences, including wave patterns, DNA structures, and nebulas
  11. "Picks of the Week". L.A. Weekly. 5 August 1999. Retrieved 1 September 2025.
  12. 1 2 "ERIC JOHNSON: Madame X". Santa Monica, California: William Turner Gallery. Retrieved 2 January 2025. Utilizing new materials and industrial products, like resin & plastic, artwork of impossibly slick, sleek character began to emerge and was termed 'Finish Fetish.'
  13. Shana Nys Dambrot (23 August 2017). "William Turner Gallery: Peter Lodato and Eric Johnson". Made in Los Angeles Artillery. Retrieved 22 March 2025. His use of wood and a taste for variably high-polish and hand-worn surface qualities create illusions of lightness and monumentality, engineering and hand-crafting, object and abstraction.
  14. "Beneath a Shared Sky: A Legacy of Art". Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles. Retrieved 27 March 2025.
  15. "City of Lancaster's Museum of Art and History (MOAH) to Open to the Public May 5th". City of Lancaster. Retrieved 26 June 2025.