Environmentally unfriendly monoliths
Peter Robinson
IMA - Institute of Modern Art
He has moved away from illustrating political, scientific, and philosophical ideas, and toward playing with materials and exploring the resulting poetic nuances. He’s been working with polystyrene—that mundane, everyday material of consumer excess. A non-biodegradable thermo-plastic, it cushions our electronic goods in transit and pollutes our foreshores. In Robinson’s work, it is also a sculptural material of infinite possibility—lightweight yet massive, able to fill large spaces yet also to articulate delicate forms. Robinson pursues multiple lines of inquiry, as if, given polystyrene’s association with disposability, any number of sculptural experiments could be explored, cast aside, and reworked. His work ranges from roughly hewn, lumpen forms to intricately carved, baroque ones. In our show Robinson continues his recent exploration of ‘the monolith’. In conjunction with Artspace, Sydney; supported by Creative New Zealand, University of Auckland, and Urban Art Projects, Brisbane.
Location
IMA - Institute of Modern Art420 Brunswick Street
Fortitude Valley Precinct
Queensland
Australia
© All rights reserved Peter Robinson 2008 Australia
Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth.
