Joel O’Dorisio







Joel O’Dorisio



Description of Work

Geometry of Light  #1- Blown glass Cut and polished - $2800.00

Geometry of Light  #2- Blown glass Cut and polished - $2800.00

Carved Wedge - Cast, cut and polished glass - $800.00


Artist's Statement

    Thick transparent glass bends and shapes light on it way to the viewer's eye.  Curves in the form can focus or disperse light based on the shape. Objects in the background take on importance within the structure of the vessel, and can be repeated, altered or transformed as the image moves through the glass.  Finally the texture and form of the light must align with the overall shape and line of the object itself.

    Taken together each piece becomes a symphony of light, color and form.  Although each piece is static, by moving around the piece colors and shapes change for the viewer.  The heavy glass bends the light, and colors change as overlapping colors filter, transmit, and reveal images in the surrounding environment.  


About the Artist

I have been fascinated with the natural beauty of trees since I was a child.  I am influenced by the inherent wonder of the natural landscape and the gritty beauty of the city.  Growing up, I spent most of my time living in the urban environment of Columbus, Ohio.  But, I spent every summer in the forests of Colorado.  From an early age I have wrestled with the fact that aspects of both worlds please me.  Yet, under most circumstances, nature and urban civilization do not coexist peacefully.

I use my work to explore cultural tidal zones.  I am fascinated with that tiny area where two fundamentally different worlds of nature and man meet, and interact with each other.  I combine rough organic textures from trees or stone with smooth machined architectural forms in glass. My sculpture is a quiet metaphor of the interaction of humanity and the natural world.

With the crystal series, I use optically pure glass to create a theatre within the glass for light to play.  As a viewer moves around the piece reflections appear and disappear, bringing elements of the organic texture directly into the facets, but only temporarily.

My series of cast colored glass uses formal sculptural elements of line, texture, and volume to express the interaction of light and glass.  Glass allows me to use light, along with the density of color as light moves through different areas, to create volume and space within a solid form.  Many of the aesthetic elements of how I use colored glass are drawn from the artists S. Libensky, and J. Brychtova.

I also explore my world and my environment through the filtered lens of technology.  In more recent work, I capture the transient beauty of a flowing stream and reinterpret it through the use of digital video.  The constant chaotic motion of the stream is projected within an installation of trees that have been stripped of bark which are hung from the walls and ceiling.  The pure beauty and energy of the stream becomes an artifact.  The installation references nature, but in the same way that a stuffed deer honors both the beauty of nature and the dominance of the hunter.

Is the stream still beautiful?  Yes.  Is there sadness in the permanent loss of that moment of the stream, or that tree from the forest?  Yes.  Is there value in the digital preservation of that moment?  I do not know.  Is it ethical for me to possess and consume a chunk of the world?  How much do I consume?  How much do I need?  I do not have all the answers, but I cannot stop asking the questions.

 

Updated: 10/16/2020 04:45PM