The artwork is a contemporary
abstract urushi mural intended to awake a wide constellation of
feelings. Waiting to pass through security, passengers are given an
esthetic pause, an artistic hiatus that they may find soothing. The
artwork’s abstraction does not seek to impose any particular
interpretation since it only exists for the sake of its own forms.
* * *
The work consists of 29 lacquered pieces: 27 flat panels and 2 sculptures shaped like elongated but slightly slanted Ds juxtaposed in different directions, and forming a series of localized patterns. Panels are of different sizes, and painted with a series of abstract textured motives that are echoed here and there throughout the work.
* * *
Each panel is shaped
like the rounded end of a simple plane wing. The succession of these
wing tips suggests many possible metaphors to the viewers. Some are
related to air travel and what it may mean to let ourselves be
carried on the powerful wings of man-made aircrafts to circle the globe
and transcend our physical limitations. But more deeply the reflection
emerges that human beings have wings of their own, and that it is
thanks to them that we learn to fly and veer through all the events
that affect our lives.
* * *
The two sculptures, one convex, one concave, provide an element of irregularity and surprise that accentuates the blend of formal and informal rhythms that traverse the entire composition; made of lacquered fiberglass, their perfectly smooth and lustrous surface contrasts with the more textured 2-D pieces. Color tones offer elemental suggestions of earth, water, air, sunlight, and verdure, and convey a cheerful inner spirit.
* * *
The composition is serene and aims at producing a visual, poetic, quasi-lyrical experience that all viewers, regardless of origin or age, will find some reason to enjoy. Viewers up close will be intrigued by the deep layering of textures, shifting colors, and the eerie luminosity of each panel. Viewers from afar will sense the peculiar appeal of the work’s different sections, and be led to wonder about what makes the composition attractive to them.
* * *
As we follow ascending and descending drafts and
let ourselves course through our existence, we are free to change
directions, explore unknown spaces, and visit distant lands. Sometimes
we encounter storms and sometimes the sky is clear ahead. Our wings
carry us as far as our inner strength and curiosity will allow. Humans
are a migratory species, and have learned to fly in multiple
formations. We are never alone in our sky, and must learn to share the
common space with others who are flying in opposite directions. On the
Tip of Our Wings, through its blend of square angles and oriented
curvatures, celebrates the harmony of our infinite possibilities.