12.1 Distinguish sculpture as three-dimensional att that viewers eacamine from multiple perspectives.
12.2 Compaze examples of freestanding and relief sculpture.
12.3 Describe additive, subtractive, and constructive techniques used to make sculprure.
12.4 Identify materials used in sculpture including kinetic and mixed media works.
12.5 Discuss the use of ins[allation and site-specific as ro transform their surroundings.
Most viewers who approach Martin Puryear’s work
C.F.A.O. (fig. 12.1, lefr) will first see a dizzying welter
of wood pieces, stacked in a loose network and glued
together, axop an old wheelbarrow. Mostly unpainted,
the stack of pieces seems to have a rectilinear organiza-
cion, but it is coo dense to see through. It is also, ac 8
feet 5 inches, rather tall. It looks as if someone may
have thought of a unique way of bringing home the
day’s purchases from the lumber yard.
Buz if we walk around is and look from the
other side (fig. 12.1, right), we see the reason for the
apparent density of the work: a large, curving shape,
based on an elongated African mask, chat the aztist
painted white. Cleazly, in order to see and grasp this
work, we must walk around it and e~camine it from
various angles.
As C.F.A.O. illustrates, sculpture is a work in three
dimensions: It has height, breadth, and depth. It thus
exists in space, as we do. As we look ac a sculpture, the
total experience of the piece is the sum of its masses,
surfaces, and profiles. In this chapter we will consider
the two main types of sculpture—freestanding and
relief—and expbre the various methods and materials
used to create them.
(G~-{Listen to the chapter audio on myartslab.com
Freestanding and Relief Sculpture Sculpture meant to be seen from all sides is called in-
the-round, or freestanding. As we move around it,
our experience of a sculpture is the sum of iu various
aspects. A single photograph shows only one view of
a sculpture under one kind of light, thus, we receive
only a limited impression of a sculpture unless we can
see many photographs oy better yet, a video; or best of
all, view the piece ourselves.
A sculpture that is not freestanding but projects
from a background surface is in relief. In low-relief
(sometimes called bas-relied sculpture, the projec-
tion from the surrounding surface is s
shadows are minimal. Coins, for exaR
low-relief sculpture stamped from mo
in the art of coin design was reached
Sicily during the classical period of
The Apollo coin (fig. 12.2), shown h
than actual size, has a strong presence
in low relief and very small.
Some of the world’s best and r
relief sculptures are found at the to
Wat in Cambodia. This vast temple
center of the Khmer empire in the
Here Kluwer kings sponsored an ex
of sculpxure and archi~ecmre. With
188 CHAPTER 12 SCULPTURE
of the complex, carvings aze in such delicare low relief that they seem more like paintings than sculpture. One scene, Army on the March (fig. 12.3), depicts a king’s army commanded by a prince. The rhythmic pattern of the spear-carrying soldiers contrasts with the curv- ing patterns of the jungle foliage in the background. The soldiers and background provide a setting for the prince, who stands with bow and azrow poised in his carriage on the elephant’s back Intricate detail covers entire surfaces oFrhe stone walls.
In high-relief sculpture, more than half of the nao- ural circumference of the modeled Form projects from the surrounding surface, and figures aze ohen subs[an- tially undercut.