Rona Pondick

Last updated
Rona Pondick
BornApril 18, 1952
Brooklyn, New York
NationalityAmerican
EducationQueens College (BA), Yale University School of Art (Master of Fine Art)
Stylesculptor
Awards
  • Anonymous Was a Woman
  • Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship
  • Guggenheim Fellowship
Website https://www.ronapondick.com/

Rona Pondick (born April 18, 1952) is an American sculptor. She lives and works in New York City. [1] Using the language of the body in her sculpture, in both a literal and a metaphorical sense, has been of interest to Pondick since the beginnings of her career in 1977. [2] An abiding concern of hers has been the exploration of the use of different materials, a consistent motif that runs throughout her work from its beginnings to the present day. [3]

Contents

Early life

Raised in Brooklyn, New York, Rona Pondick earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Queens College in New York in 1974. She earned a Master of Fine Arts in 1977 from Yale University School of Art in New Haven, Connecticut, where she studied sculpture with David Von Schlegell, an American sculptor, and also studied with Richard Serra, who was a visiting artist in the program at the time. [1] [4] [5]

Artistry

Pondick began to exhibit in galleries and museums in the mid 1980s, and since that time her sculpture and site-specific installations have been shown in exhibitions throughout the world. [6] Her work can be divided into two stylistic periods: early work based on fragments that reference the human body, [6] and later work centered around the human body as part of hybrid sculptures, merged with forms from nature of flora and fauna. [7]

Color

In 2018, Lynn Zelevansky wrote, “Color … enhances the informality and approachability of Pondick’s new work. Each object is named for the colors it contains. Her palette begins with the primary hues for photographic printing—magenta, cyan, and yellow—to which she adds green, blue, black, and white. [8] Made from resin, acrylic, and an epoxy modeling compound…they are each partly translucent and in places almost evanescent, changing as the light changes and as viewers move around them… The addition of color and the new materials significantly alter the visual impact and emotional tenor of Pondick’s art.” [9]

Head in Tree is an example of Pondick's hybrid sculptures; here, the artist has incorporated her life-sized head into the center of a tree, cast in matte finish stainless steel, highly polished for the back of the head. Head in Tree, 2006-2008.jpg
Head in Tree is an example of Pondick's hybrid sculptures; here, the artist has incorporated her life-sized head into the center of a tree, cast in matte finish stainless steel, highly polished for the back of the head.

Artist's technique

In her sculpture, Pondick has always used traditional methods such as carving, hand-modeling, mold-making, and metal casting, and at times, has used the latest in 3D computer technologies occasionally for modeling but largely for scaling. [10] This results in a mystery in the process, and it is often hard to discern how these objects are made. [11]

Early work: fragments

Beginning with work from the early 1980s, Pondick has worked with fragments that invoke the body, including shoes, baby bottles, and teeth, “a quirky vocabulary of anatomical parts and body related objects that had some of Louise Bourgeois' oddity and near-surrealism and Philip Guston’s poignant, ambiguous symbolism.” [2] [12] These early provocative works have included scatological references in bodily assemblages. [13] Her early work has been interpreted by critics in numerous ways, as a feminist critique of Freudian theories of sexuality, as an expression of infantile and juvenile desires, [6] and as “Freudian vaudeville acts designed to make you laugh until you feel something caught in your throat.” [14]

Her earliest sculptures are unmistakably scatalogical. [11] From the late 1980s to early 1990s, Pondick made sculptures of beds using pillows, cloth, and wood, some with baby bottles strapped to them with rope. [15]

Later work

Hybrid sculptures: Animals/Flora and the Body

Beginning in 1998, Pondick began to make sculptures that merged parts of animals and flora with those of her own body, primarily casting them in bronze or stainless steel. Pondick merged traditional hand modeling with computer technology in order to create these hybrid sculptures, which incorporate depictions of her own head and hands. [16] For example, in her first work in the series, Dog (1998-2001), she combined a human head and hands with the body of a dog, creating a sphinx-like figure. [17] [18] Other human-animal hybrids include Cat, Otter, Muskrat. Monkeys, and Ram's Head. [16] [19] [20] As Pondick stated, "I use the animal form because it is recognizable and holds its scale no matter where you put it." [5]

Dog, created between 1998 and 2001, displays the core elements of Pondick's human-animal hybrids. Here, the artist's head and hands are combined with a dog's body, cast in highly polished stainless steel. Dog sculpture by Rona Pondick.jpg
Dog, created between 1998 and 2001, displays the core elements of Pondick's human-animal hybrids. Here, the artist's head and hands are combined with a dog's body, cast in highly polished stainless steel.

Hybrid sculptures: Trees and the Body

In 1995, Pondick made her first sculpture of a tree using fruit scattered on the ground that incorporated human teeth. [21] Her first tree/human hybrid sculpture incorporated the artist's miniaturized head as buds in the tree branches, using aluminum, bronze, and stainless steel. Her first tree/human hybrid sculpture was Pussy Willow Tree in 2001, commissioned by Fondation pour l’art contemporain Claudine et Jean-Marc Salomon in Annecy, France. This was followed by Cranbrook Art Museum's commission of Crimson Queen Maple in 2003, and by Head in Tree, commissioned by Sonsbeek International in 2008 and installed in the center of a pond. [22] A sub category: “Magenta Swimming in Yellow” by Rona Pondick, 2015–17. Pigmented resin and acrylic.(Zevitas Marcus). Rona Pondick's sculptures at Zevitas Marcus gallery are both serene and nightmarish. The artist makes casts of her own head in brightly colored resins, then perches them atop tiny, atrophied bodies, or embeds them in clear cubes or plinths of contrasting color. The results are bizarre by intriguing moments suspended in time. [23]

Awards and grants

Solo museum exhibitions

This list includes material from Landau, [24] Stoops, [25] Van Der Zijpp, [26] Weiermair, [27] and Zaya. [28]

Aside from participating in exhibitions, she also lectured at universities and institutions such as Yale University, Princeton, Columbia, and even Bezalel, Academy of Arts & Design in Israel and Palais des Beaux Arts de Lille in France. [29]

International museum exhibitions

Pondick's work has been included in international exhibitions including the Lyon, [30] Venice, and Johannesburg [31] Biennales, the Whitney Biennial, [32] and Sonsbeek. [33]

Museum collections

Pondick's work is represented in museum collections including The Allen Memorial Art Museum [34] at Oberlin College, The Brooklyn Museum, [35] The Carnegie Museum of Art, [36] Centre Georges Pompidou, [37] Cleveland Museum of Art, [38] The DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, [39] The Fogg Art Museum/Harvard Art Museums, [40] The High Museum of Art, [41] The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), [42] The Metropolitan Museum of Art, [43] The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, [44] The Museum of Modern Art, [45] The Morgan Library and Museum, [46] [41] Nasher Sculpture Center, [47] The National Gallery of Art, [48] The New Orleans Museum of Art, [49] The New York Public Library, [41] The Rose Art Museum, [50] The Toledo Museum of Art, [51] The Whitney Museum, [52] and The Worcester Art Museum. [53]

Bibliography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louise Bourgeois</span> French-American artist (1911–2010)

Louise Joséphine Bourgeois was a French-American artist. Although she is best known for her large-scale sculpture and installation art, Bourgeois was also a prolific painter and printmaker. She explored a variety of themes over the course of her long career including domesticity and the family, sexuality and the body, as well as death and the unconscious. These themes connect to events from her childhood which she considered to be a therapeutic process. Although Bourgeois exhibited with the abstract expressionists and her work has much in common with Surrealism and feminist art, she was not formally affiliated with a particular artistic movement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kiki Smith</span> German-born American artist

Kiki Smith is a German-born American artist whose work has addressed the themes of sex, birth and regeneration. Her figurative work of the late 1980s and early 1990s confronted subjects such as AIDS, feminism, and gender, while recent works have depicted the human condition in relationship to nature. Smith lives and works in the Lower East Side, New York City, and the Hudson Valley, New York State.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mario Merz</span> Italian artist (1925–2003)

Mario Merz was an Italian artist, and husband of Marisa Merz.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ana Maria Pacheco</span>

Ana Maria Pacheco is a Brazilian sculptor, painter, and printmaker. Her work is influenced by her Brazilian heritage and often focuses on supernatural themes, incorporating them into unfolding narratives within her work. Pacheco's work has been displayed in galleries internationally and has won multiple awards throughout her career.

Sarah Sze is an American artist and professor of visual arts at Columbia University. She has exhibited internationally and her works are in the collections of several major museums. Sze's work explores the role of technology and information in contemporary life utilizing everyday materials. Drawing from Modernist traditions, Sze's work often represents objects caught in suspension.

Rachel Harrison is an American visual artist known for her sculpture, photography, and drawing. Her work often combines handmade forms with found objects or photographs, bringing art history, politics, and pop culture into dialogue with one another. She has been included in numerous exhibitions in Europe and the US, including the Venice Biennale, the Whitney Biennial and the Tate Triennial (2009). Her work is in the collections of major museums such as The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; and Tate Modern, London; among others. She lives and works in New York.

Ileana Sonnabend was a Romanian-American art dealer of 20th-century art. The Sonnabend Gallery opened in Paris in 1962 and was instrumental in making American art of the 1960s known in Europe, with an emphasis on American pop art. In 1970, Sonnabend Gallery opened in New York on Madison Avenue, and in 1971 relocated to 420 West Broadway in SoHo where it was one of the major protagonists that made SoHo the international art center it remained until the early 1990s. The gallery was instrumental in making European art of the 1970s known in America, with an emphasis on European conceptual art and Arte Povera. It also presented American conceptual and minimal art of the 1970s. In 1986, the so-called "Neo-Geo" show introduced, among others, the artist Jeff Koons. In the late 1990s, the gallery moved to Chelsea and continues to be active after Sonnabend's death. The gallery goes on showing the work of artists who rose to prominence in the 1960s and 1970s including Robert Morris, Bernd and Hilla Becher and Gilbert & George as well as more recent artists including Jeff Koons, Rona Pondick, Candida Höfer, Elger Esser, and Clifford Ross.

Katharina Fritsch is a German sculptor. She lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeff Koons</span> American sculptor and painter (born 1955)

Jeffrey Lynn Koons is an American artist recognized for his work dealing with popular culture and his sculptures depicting everyday objects, including balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror-finish surfaces. He lives and works in both New York City and his hometown of York, Pennsylvania. His works have sold for substantial sums, including at least two record auction prices for a work by a living artist: US$58.4 million for Balloon Dog (Orange) in 2013 and US$91.1 million for Rabbit in 2019.

Judy Pfaff is an American artist known mainly for installation art and sculptures, though she also produces paintings and prints. Pfaff has received numerous awards for her work, including a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship in 2004 and grants from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (1983) and the National Endowment for the Arts. Major exhibitions of her work have been held at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, the Denver Art Museum and Saint Louis Art Museum. In 2013 she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Video interviews can be found on Art 21, Miles McEnery Gallery, MoMa, Mount Holyoke College Art Museum and other sources.

Paul Sietsema is a Los Angeles–based American artist who works primarily in film, painting and drawing. His work addresses the production, consumption, and proliferation of cultural objects, reflecting his interest in the possibility of an artwork to mediate information or meaning in a way that engages with the aesthetics of a specific time period. In the words of Sarah Robayo Sheridan, “Paul Sietsema compounds organic and artificial detritus in all his artwork, scavenging in history’s wake to identify specific tools of cultural production and foraging for concepts of art promulgated in the words of artists and attitudes of critics. He mines film as a vestige, the medium of the mechanical age, pressing and squeezing its very obsolescence through a contemporary sieve. In so doing, the artist hovers in the switchover between a bodily inscription in the image and a fundamental reconstitution of sight and representation in the matrix of the virtual. Where body stops and image starts is a divide collapsing through a series of innovations and accidents that go back as far as the people of Pompeii trapped in an emulsion that marked their death, but which paradoxically carried forward their image into eternity.”

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Karen LaMonte</span> American artist

Karen LaMonte is an American artist known for her life-size sculptures in ceramic, bronze, marble, and cast glass.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michele Oka Doner</span> American artist and author

Michele Oka Doner is an American artist and author who works in a variety of media including sculpture, prints, drawings, functional objects and video. She has also worked in costume and set design and has created over 40 public and private permanent art installations, including “A Walk On The Beach,” a one and a quarter mile long bronze and terrazzo concourse at Miami International Airport.

Rona Green is an Australian visual artist.

Kim Lim (1936–1997) was a Singaporean-British sculptor and printmaker of Chinese descent. She is most recognized for her abstract wooden and stone-carved sculptures that explore the relationship between art and nature, and works on paper that developed alongside her sculptural practice. Lim's attention to the minute details of curve, line and surface made her an exponent of minimalism.

Brigitte Kowanz was an Austrian artist. Kowanz studied from 1975 to 1980 at the University of Applied Arts Vienna. She was Professor of Transmedial Art there from 1997.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kris Lemsalu</span> Estonian artist

Kris Lemsalu is a contemporary artist based in Tallinn, Estonia and Vienna, Austria. She studied art at the Estonian Academy of Arts, the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, and the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. Eccentric with color and material, she uses props, costumes, and other natural materials to portray her artwork. In these installations, Lemsalu sculpts an installation that "gives birth to a world of shamanic force, visionary weirdness, and collective revival." By playing with traditions, Lemsalu blurs the origin and scenically removes their dogma. She avoids "concrete labeling, simultaneously showing us the absurdity of as well as the effectiveness of rituals. From this collective transformative euphoria emerges a belief in the possibility of human redemption." "A punk pagan trickster feminist sci-fi shaman, Kris Lemsalu gathers together both collected and crafted objects into totemic sculptures and hallucinatory environments, animated with performances by the artist and her coterie of collaborators;" her work being shown in many places, including Berlin, Copenhagen and Tokyo. In 2015, she participated in Frieze Art Fair New York, where her work Whole Alone 2 was selected among of five best exhibits by the Frieze New York jury.

Robert Feintuch is an American painter who lives and works in New York City.

Sylvia Palacios Whitman is a Chilean-American artist, painter, sculptor, and performer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heide Fasnacht</span> American visual artist

Heide Fasnacht is a New York City-based artist who works in sculpture, drawing, painting and installation art. Her work explores states of flux, instability and transformation caused by human action and natural events. Since the mid-1990s, she has been known for sculptures and drawings that recreate momentary phenomena such as sneezes, geysers and demolitions—in sometimes abstract or cartoony form—that are temporally and spatially "frozen" for consideration of their aesthetic, perceptual, social or sensate qualities. In the late 2010s, she has expanded these themes in paintings that examine lost and neglected childhood sites, such as playgrounds and amusement parks. ARTnews critic Ken Shulman has described her work as "chart[ing] the fluid dialogue between second and third dimensions, motion and inertia, creation and ruin."

References

  1. 1 2 Heller, Jules; Heller G., Nancy (1995). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century . New York, NY: Garland Publishing. ISBN   978-0815325840.
  2. 1 2 MacAdam, Barbara A. (2010). "Self-Portrait as Muskrat, Monkey and Mouse". ARTnews (May): 95.
  3. "Worcester Art Museum". The Metamorphosis of an Object.
  4. Posner, Helaine. "Pondick, Rona." In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, (accessed February 10, 2012; subscription required).
  5. 1 2 Phong Bui (March 4, 2013), In Conversation, The Brooklyn Rail, retrieved 2013-07-22
  6. 1 2 3 Koplos, Janet (September 2002). "Rona Pondick: Orchestrated Obsessions". Art in America: 114–119.
  7. Princenthal, Nancy (7 April 2002). "A Dreamlike Melding of Human, Beast, and Steel". The New York Times . No. Pages 33, 35.
  8. Zelevanksy, Lynn (2018). Rona Pondick: Without Evasion or Compromise / Rona Pondick: Works 2013-2018. New York; Los Angeles: Marc Straus and Zevitas Marcus. p. 9. ISBN   978-0692-14302-5.
  9. Zelevanksy, Lynn (2018). Rona Pondick: Without Evasion or Compromise / Rona Pondick: Works 2013-2018. New York; Los Angeles: Marc Straus and Zevitas Marcus. p. 7. ISBN   978-0692-14302-5.
  10. Fitfield, George. "Rona Pondick: Lifelike, Unnatural, Hybrid Sculptures Address Questions of Fear and Desire". Art New England (221): 3, 75.
  11. 1 2 Stoops, Susan L. (2009). Rona Pondick: The Metamorphosis of an Object (Print ed.). Worcester, MA: Worcester Art Museum. pp. 11–27. ISBN   978-0936042206.
  12. Posner, Helaine (2007). "Louise Bourgeois: Intensity and Influence". After the Revolution. Munich: Prestel. p. 45. ISBN   978-3-7913-3732-6.
  13. Schneider Adams, Laurie (1999). Art Across Time, Volume 2. Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill College. p.  934-934. ISBN   978-0697274809.
  14. Brenson, Michael (May 3, 1991). "Review/Art; Nicholas Africano Explores the Melding of Innocence and Experience". The New York Times .
  15. Myers, Terry R. (December 1988). "Rona Pondick". Arts Magazine: 89.
  16. 1 2 Johnson, Ken. (April 14, 2006) "Art in Review; Rona Pondick", The New York Times . Retrieved October 17, 2012.
  17. Lloyd, Ann Wilson. (November 13, 2009) "Rona Pondick", Art in America . Retrieved October 17, 2012.
  18. Princenthal, Nancy. (April 7, 2002) "Art/Architecture; A Dreamlike Melding Of Human, Beast and Steel", The New York Times . Retrieved October 17, 2012.
  19. Kaneda, Shirley (October 2009). "Rona Pondick", Bombsite . Retrieved October 17, 2012.
  20. Flannery, Maura C. (2003) "Biology & Art: An Intricate Relationship". The American Biology Teacher . 74:3. DOI: 10.1525/abt.2012.74.3.13. Retrieved October 17, 2012.
  21. Houston, Joe (2008). Rona Pondick: Works / Werke 1986-2008, New York, Salzburg. Salzburg: Internationale Sommerakademie für Bildende Kunst. ISBN   978-3-901369-32-2.
  22. MacAdam, Barbara A. (2008). Rona Pondick, Head in Tree and Other Works, 1999-2008. Ljubljana, Slovenia: TR3. pp. 15–17.
  23. "Rona Pondick's head sculptures: Beautiful nightmares of mind and body". Los Angeles Times. 2019-03-09. Retrieved 2021-10-07.
  24. Landau, Suzanne (1992). Pink and Brown (Print, Exhibition Catalog ed.). Jerusalem: Israel Museum.
  25. Stoops, Susan; Hart, Dakin; Princenthal, Nancy; Fitfield, George (2009). Rona Pondick: The Metamorphosis of an Object. Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Art Museum. ISBN   978-0-936042-20-6.
  26. Van Der Zijpp, Sue-an (2002). 'Beyond the Order of Things,' Rona Pondick (Print ed.). Sonnabend Press. pp. 4–5.
  27. Weiermair, Peter (2002). 'Considerations about the Work of Rona Pondick,' Rona Pondick (Print ed.). Sonnabend Press. pp. 7–10.
  28. Zaya, Octavio (2002). 'Rona Pondick: The Metamorphosis of an Object Maker: An Interview with Rona Pondick,' Rona Pondick (Print ed.). Sonnabend Press. pp. 111–139.
  29. "Rona Pondick". MARC STRAUS. Retrieved 2021-10-07.
  30. Martin, Jean-Hubert (2000). 'Partage d'Exotismes,' 5eme Biennale d'art contemporain de Lyon (Exhibition Catalog. Print. ed.). Lyon, France: Lyon Biennale. pp. Volume 2, pages 32–33, 210.
  31. Enwezor, Okwui; Zaya, Octavio (Fall 1997). 'Trade Routes: History and Geography,' Second Johannesburg Biennale (Print ed.). Johannesburg Biennale. pp. 180–181.
  32. Armstrong, Richard; Hanhardt, John; Marshall, Richard; Phillips, Lisa (1991). 1991 Biennial Exhibition (Print ed.). Whitney Museum of Art in association with W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 210–2013.
  33. Tilroe, Anna (2008). 'Wisdom--Rona Pondick,' Sonsbeek 2008: Grandeur (Print ed.). Arnhem, Netherlands: Thieme Art, Deventer, Stichting Sonsbeek Internationaal. pp. 81–87, 262, 273.
  34. http://allenartcollection.oberlin.edu/emuseum/view/objects/asitem/id/6078 [ dead link ]
  35. "Brooklyn Museum".
  36. "CMOA Collection".
  37. "Rona Pondick".
  38. https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2015.29?collection_search_query=dwarfed%20white%20jack&op=search&form_build_id=form-QQibLc97PlriY0qbf0r6MmuCgDffSKuhKD0e39GeE3c&form_id=clevelandart_collection_search_form&f[0]=field_images_field_large_image_url%3A1&c=1
  39. "Otter | deCordova". www.decordova.org. Archived from the original on 2012-03-02.
  40. "From the Harvard Art Museums' collections I Want". www.harvardartmuseums.org. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24.
  41. 1 2 3 "I.C. EDITIONS / RONA PONDICK / I want". www.iceditions.com. Archived from the original on 2015-11-19.
  42. "Jacks | LACMA Collections".
  43. "Rona Pondick | Rona Pondick: The Metamorphosis of an Object".
  44. "Exhibitions".
  45. "The Collection | MoMA".
  46. "#the-morgan-library-&-museum on Tumblr".
  47. "Collection Landing". www.nashersculpturecenter.org. Retrieved 2021-09-30.
  48. "Untitled". 1995.
  49. "Monkeys @ NOMA | New Orleans Museum of Art". noma.org. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08.
  50. http://rosecollection.brandeis.edu/THA2488?sid=25&x=4336
  51. "Rona Pondick | Sculptor | New York City". www.ronapondick.com. Archived from the original on 2014-03-26.
  52. "Rona Pondick".
  53. http://vqs61.v3.pair.com:8080/emuseum/view/people/asitem/P/429?t:state:flow=81a364e0-bc2c-48db-b586-83a102418ea2 [ dead link ]