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CLAIRE FALKENSTEIN (1908 - 1997)
Claire Falkenstein is internationally recognized for her innovative Abstract
Expressionist sculptures, made of thorny thickets of welded metal fused
with melted glass. Beginning in the early 1930s, she invented abstract
forms that reflected the new scientific and philosophical concepts of
the twentieth century.
She grew up in a tiny isolated community on Coos Bay in Oregon. The town
had one industry-the
lumber mill in which her father was a manager. Falkenstein recalled her
initiation into a life of art: "The only art in Coos Bay was the
funny papers, with one exception. The wealthy owner of the mill, L. J.
Simpson, was a collector. He built a mansion called Shore Acres, above
the ocean, which he made into a work of art. From six years old to the
age of twelve, we used to go there as guests. I was stimulated because
I saw a real honest-to-God oil painting. It was a mythological painting
of somebody chasing somebody else. . . I remember looking at it coming
down the stairway. There was a bronze tiger on the piano and wonderful
oriental rugs . . . ."
As a child, Falkenstein would ride her horse in the dark on the beach
to see the sun come up and spend time looking at the shells, rocks, seaweed,
and driftwood, and these nature forms inspired her sculpture.
At the University of California, Berkeley, Falkenstein majored in art
and minored in philosophy and anthropology, but was unmotivated until
her junior year. The academic art classes were tedious, but one teacher,
George Lusk, had studied with Andre LHote in Paris and was an independent
and a modernist.
From 1930
to 1939, while teaching to support her, Falkenstein created nonobjective,
textured ceramic sculptures from ribbons of clay bent into interwoven
Mobius strips. These forms, undulating in hollow and round curves, show
her early interest in scientific concepts. From their dates they would
appear to be some of the early nonobjective sculptures in America.
Between 1940 and 1944, she produced a series of wood pieces called "exploded
volumes," made of interlocking parts that could be moved and separated
into different combinations by the viewer: "This concept of the importance
of the interval the spaces between has always been important to me".
Falkenstein
went to Paris in 1950 and met Jean Arp, Alberto Giacometti, and many other
European artists. She also associated with a talented group of Americans,
including Sam Francis and Paul Jenkins. The Americans came under the protective
wing of a mentor, Michel Tapie, an art connoisseur and intellectual who
promoted their work and their ideas. He also discussed with them the relationship
between the new art and Einsteinian concepts in physics and mathematics
that were replacing the old Newtonian and Euclidean logic.
In 1958,
Tapie arranged a show at the new Galleria Spazio in Rome. The architect,
Luigi Moretti, asked Falkenstein to design a welded stair railing for
the gallery. Since the sun came down into the gallery from the street,
Moretti suggested that she use colored glass, which would cast colored
light on the floor. But Falkenstein had advanced from cubism to topology,
and refused to do anything that used flat panes of glass. Instead, she
experimented and discovered how to fuse chunks of colored glass with copper
tubing by heating them together in a kiln. This type of tubing, bent and
welded and hammered flat in places, with pieces of colored glass melting
in the interstices, became her uniquely invented medium.
After thirteen years abroad, during which she had become well known in
Europe, Falkenstein returned to the United States in 1962 and built a
modern house-studio on the sea in Venice, California. In the following
years, she carried out her most ambitious, large-scale public commissions.
These include "Structure" and "Flow #2" (1963-1965),
a fountain for California Federal Savings and Loan in Los Angeles, fountains
and sculptures for Fresno and Coos Bay shopping malls, a fountain for
the San Diego Art Museum, a screen for the Seattle Art Museum, and other
works.
In 1960, the artist completed her monumental commission for St. Basils
Cathedral on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles. In the doors, Falkenstein
reiterated her concept of the never-ending screen. The fifteen stained
glass windows (some are 144 feet high) are not flat, but rather, move
in and out in three dimensions.
Louis
Stern Fine Arts is the exclusive representative of the Estate
of
Claire Falkenstein.
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