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Sarah Peters

Special Online Presentation

May 20 – June 12, 2020

Portrait of the Artist

Portrait of the Artist

artist's rubber molds

One of the artist's rubber molds

Image of the artist's studio tools

Image of the artist's studio tools

wax mold for a bonze sculpture

Preparatory wax model of "Shadow Puppet with Triangle," 2018
 

Sarah Peters
headless bronze statuette

Hermaphrodite, 2013
Bronze
9.5 x 5 x 3 inches (24.1 x 12.7 x 7.6 cm)

$4,000

bronze statuette with a large tongue

Tongue, 2018
Bronze, unique
4.75 x 4 x 15 inches (12.1 x 10.2 x 38.1 cm)

$7,500

bronze statuette with a large tongue

Tongue [alternate view], 2018
Bronze, unique
4.75 x 4 x 15 inches (12.1 x 10.2 x 38.1 cm)

$7,500

bronze statuette with a long pointy neck

Woman with Long Neck, 2018
Bronze, unique
12.5 x 7.5 x 3.75 inches (31.8 x 19.1 x 9.5 cm)

$7,500

bronze statuette with a long pointy neck

Woman with Long Neck [alternate view], 2018
Bronze, unique
12.5 x 7.5 x 3.75 inches (31.8 x 19.1 x 9.5 cm)

$7,500

bronze statuette of a man's face on two long supports

Male Profile with Stick, 2018
Bronze, unique
13 x 7 x 6 inches (33 x 17.8 x 15.2 cm)

$7,500

bronze statuette of a man's face on two long supports

Male Profile with Stick [alternate view], 2018
Bronze, unique
13 x 7 x 6 inches (33 x 17.8 x 15.2 cm)

$7,500

statuette of a woman's face with a large triangular base

Shadow Puppet with Triangle, 2018
Bronze, unique
13.5 x 4.75 x 3.75 inches (34.3 x 12.1 x 9.5 cm)

$7,500

statuette of a woman's face with a large triangular base

Shadow Puppet with Triangle [alternate view], 2018
Bronze, unique
13.5 x 4.75 x 3.75 inches (34.3 x 12.1 x 9.5 cm)

$7,500

drawing of a woman with large hair and a pointed nose

Woman with a Pointed Nose, 2012
Pen and ink and pencil on paper
22 x 30 inches (55.9 x 76.2 cm)

$2,700

drawing of a woman with very large hair

Woman with Ecstatic Hair, 2012
Pen and ink and pencil on paper
22 x 30 inches (55.9 x 76.2 cm)

$2,700

Emphasizing the free-form nature of play, this selection of sculpture and drawing by Sarah Peters (b. 1973) explores an intimate part of the artist’s practice focused on instinct and pleasure. There is an automatic and spontaneous process that creates each work imbuing humor and playfulness into Peter’s visual language while the artist infiltrates and distorts the images of Classicism. These works are whimsical, animated, and informed by a deep affinity for the history of figuration, particularly the history of handheld figurative objects such as dolls, puppets, talismans, jugs, and toys.

 

In practice, the process of how these works were created emphasizes their instinctual nature. The unique bronze sculptures were created in a direct, lost-wax casting technique, in which the artist thumbs, prods, cuts, melts, and essentially plays with the initial wax until the form has taken shape, later to be cast directly into bronze without a mold. Appearing as silhouette puppets the sculptural forms either lose their heads, or like the drawings, become body-less caricatures of the human psyche. For both the sculptures and drawings, there is no predetermined blueprint as Peters projects an ephemera of passing thoughts directly onto the medium. These works were made instinctually, marks etched equally onto paper and bronze prompting the viewer to look closer, and then to look underneath the surface.  

 

In their entirety, these works show the psychic geography of people, a narrative critique of several themes that are often found throughout Peters’ oeuvre; among them, cultural authority, identity, and gendered power dynamics. There is an element of irony in the dismembered sculptures and drawings that is transgressive, transforming a variety of social, historical, and cultural symbols into an open-ended game. This visual language of play allows a freedom of expression that can exist in two states at once: figurative but abstracted, familiar though strange, contemporary yet historical. Peters’ process becomes not unlike an anthropological dig, you may not know what mysterious object you’ll find underneath the many layers, and yet, once found and recognized, the objects are material evidence of the most ordinary human activity: the expression of power through functional objects.

 

For Peters, it is crucial that these playful objects relate to an element of basic human functionality, objects for daily life - like a Roman mirror with a handle that is formed into a body, a bottle opener in the shape of a leg, or a pipe with a face. All her sculptures in essence are related to the utility of the medium, not unlike the sacred objects of a foregone-civilization’s tomb, containing a matter-of-fact spiritual and psychological function. Though Peter’s figures may be reflections of human-kind, they are seen through a funhouse-mirror, injecting humor into a dilemma perhaps as old as time.