Stephan Balkenhol
champions the Everyman
through his human and animal
forms that are roughly carved
from blocks of wood. With his
careful attention to material
and appreciation of shape,
the 43-year-old German artist
pays tribute to the
time-honored tradition of
figurative sculpture in a
non-traditional manner.
Though his body of work
includes drawings and
sculptures in a variety of
media, wood remains
Balkenhol's preferred medium
and the human figure his
prime subject. "With wood,"
he says, "I can achieve a
sense of vitality not possible in marble or bronze."
The CAC is exhibiting several
new Balkenhol works - all large
wood sculptures - which have
their première at the CAC. Often
shaping his works from a single
block of wood, Balkenhol
challenges the tradition of slow,
methodical wood carving by
attacking his work with speed
and intuition, and making his
figures seem ordinary.
Balkenhol says he seeks "an
expression from which one
could imagine all other states of
mind ... a starting point for
everything else."
In 1972, the teenage Balkenhol
attended Dokumenta, an
international exhibition of contemporary art held every five
years in Kassel, Germany. During his visit, he became
attracted to the figurative works of Pop and Photo-Realist
painters and sculptors. The experience inspired him to try his
hand at carving wood sculptures of human heads. After
receiving training in Minimalism and Conceptualism in the early
1980s, Balkenhol returned to producing human forms - clothing
them in simple pants and shirts, purposely avoiding any
symbolic implications or storytelling.
Organized by the
Contemporary Arts Center, the
exhibition will travel to the Bell
Gallery at Brown University
and the Forum for
Contemporary Art in St. Louis,
and will be accompanied by a
CAC-produced catalog.
All images courtesy Barbara
Gladstone Gallery.
Contemporary Arts Center 115 E. Fifth St. Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 Phone: (513) 345-8400 Fax: (513) 721-7418