The Art of Assemblage

CRAFT OF MAINE-JAN/FEB 2009

by Candace Karu Photography Scott Dorrance

Ten Maine artists explore the bricolage of found objects

Artists have been making assemblages for centuries, using the materials and objects around them as vehicles of expression. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, artists such as Edgar Degas, Marcel Duchamp, Louise Nevelson, and Pablo Picasso worked with objets trouves, or found objects, regularly experimenting with scavenged pieces to give new voice to materials that had long been silenced.

The French artist Jean Dubuffet often incorporated dirt, stones, discarded papers, and other organic materials onto his canvases. In 1953, he created a series of compositions using butterfly wings, which inspired him to coin the term assemblages d’empreintes (assemblages of fingerprints). Taking the concept of collage from two dimensions to three, Dubuffet’s work used banal materials and man-made objects to create art that was both immediate and sculptural. In describing this technique, he said: “Art should be born from the materials and, spiritually, should borrow its language from it. Each material has its own language so there is no need to make it serve a language.”

In 1961, responding to a world and culture in transition, the Museum of Modern Art in New York launched a daring exhibition called The Art of Assemblage, to wide public and critical acclaim. As the first major show of assemblage art, it included more than 140 European and American artists, including Picasso and Dubuffet, as well as Joseph Cornell, Georges Braque, Man Ray, and Robert Rauschenberg.

Assemblage art reflects and amplifies the ephemeral nature of the material from which it is created, reimagining the intent and purpose of the discarded original. The juxtaposition of components explores relationships, often awkward and frequently complicated, bringing fresh intent through evocative composition.

We have invited ten Maine artists to share their work on these pages, using the vocabulary of bricolage to give each of their assemblages a rich and varied resonance.

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Michael Branca Micro Mona, 2003
Pencil on paper, typerwriter part
2” x 3.5”

Harvey Peterson
Shiner/Boxer, 2008
Wood, old fabric tape measures, fabric, found boxing gloves, with polychrome
46” x 14” x 9”

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Mark Kelly
Series, Between Breaths, 2006–ongoing
Found materials
9” x 7.5” each

Mike Libby
Orthoptera: Tropidacris, 2008 Grasshopper with copper and brass antique watch parts, gears, springs
6” x 6” x 6” libby_edit_w

Edward Mackenzie
Clean Green and Orange, 1999
Fuel additive syringes, wine casks, wooden frames
each letter 14” x 10” x 11” mackenzie3_w

Jill Dalton
Celestial Communicator, 2007
Vintage lightning rod, found steel and copper
48” x 16” x 40” dalton_2_edit_w

Mildred Johnson
Counterpoint, 2008
Assemblage 16” x 8” x 3” johnson_edit_w

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Wesley Reddick
Mammological Artifact, 2008
Antique hemlock barnboard, hammered wire, leather, cut nails
18” x 10” x 4”

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Robin McCarthy
Organic Object with Chain, 2008
Monoprint with metal
10” x 9” x .5”

 

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