Arlene Shechet is known for creating ceramics that bypass the intimate, domestic and useful objects of the home, bringing the material into the wider world of sculpture. In recent residencies in Germany, at the world-renown Meissen porcelain factory, and at the John Michael Kohler Art Center’s Artist Residency program in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, Shechet has scaled up her materials, adding muscle and might to her surreal objects that confound human and nature, abstraction and figuration, serious high art and playful children’s toys.
Tilted Channel is from a series of works, titled Full Steam Ahead, commissioned by Madison Square Park, New York. Rather than placing her work on the great lawn, she instead chose a more urban space—the concrete reflecting pool that is emptied every year from fall through late spring. Shechet was interested in creating works that would interrupt the visitor’s daily hustle through the Park by designing works that double as furniture.
There is a sly animistic sense to Tilted Channel. We see a decorative brick wall with what appears to be a bright yellow bird buried upside down in the bricks, one claw grasping, the other letting go. Or is that a human whose hands have morphed into a wrench and a file? The “hands” are actually a sprue, the tool used to help cast molten materials like porcelain. The surreal quality of this work is reminiscent of a fairy tale, where humans and animals morph into dreamy figures that frighten or engage.
The placement of Shechet’s work for Sculpture Milwaukee provides Tilted Channel with another chance to insert itself into a much-trafficked urban space. Indeed, every downtown is a tussle between the natural environment displaced by cars and buildings, roadways and sidewalks. The clean modernist lines of the white building backdrop highlight the more natural form of the yellow bird. Tilted Channel becomes a monument to the birds and animals that have gathered around Lake Michigan and the Milwaukee River to take advantage of the region’s natural abundance.
The series title Full Steam Ahead is based on a phrase by Union Admiral David Glasgow Farragut*—immortalized in a statue in Madison Square Park—when he ordered his naval troops to break the Confederate blockade at Mobile Bay. “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!”, suggests going for broke, doing the right thing. Shechet’s work goes for broke in terms of her materials, but she also has integrated an explicit political message as well.
With her first public works of the Full Steam Ahead series, Shechet sought to undermine the almost exclusive male-warrior monument that still populates the landscape by celebrating the other species that share our earth. Shechet is part of the artistic reconsideration of how, and who, we celebrate in public sculpture.
* https://www.history.com/topics/american-civil-war/david-farragut
Arlene Shechet was born in 1951 in New York, where she lives and works. She studied at New York University and the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence.