Aaron Spangler

Aaron Spangler
Born 1971 (1971)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Nationality American
Education Minneapolis College of Art and Design – BFA degree (1993)
Known for Sculpture, printmaking
Movement Contemporary art
Awards 2010 – McKnight Artist Fellowship for Visual Artists
1998 – Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowship
1997 – Jerome Foundation Travel and Study Grant

Aaron Spangler (born 1971, Minneapolis, Minnesota) is a sculptor and printmaker who lives and works in Park Rapids, Minnesota. He attended the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, earning his BFA degree in 1993. He is represented by Zieher Smith & Horton, in New York City.

Spangler's sculptures typically consist of carved solid blocks of basswood that are finished with coats of black gesso and graphite. Spangler carves his sculptures using mallets, chisels, and a Dremel-style rotary tool.[1] Ken Johnson commented that, ""You don't see much wood carving in elite Chelsea galleries. An antiquated craft with little relevance to modern technologies of communication or to a competitive, fast-paced contemporary art market...so it is exciting to come upon the large, intricate reliefs".[2] Spangler works three-dimensionally and in bas-relief, a challenging and intricate medium. His work is often concerned with "war's devastation and its potential as a metaphor for psychological conflict" as well as "anarchy in rural America".[3] His sculptures seek to envision a "fascinating and frightening revolution against passive consumerism 'of the people, by the people'"[4] Multi-faceted, his work reveals more upon second and third glances; shifting scale and perspective propelling the viewer deeper into the psyche of the piece, leading one critic to claim that Spangler piled "images and motifs, just like ancient Romans heaped up captured armor and weapons as trophies".[5] Spangler has transformed "a marginalized craft typically associated with bearded, plaid-shirted gentlemen of a certain age into a conduit for the mythology of the Midwest without diminishing its tactility or symbolic richness".[6]

Notable Exhibitions

Awards and Grants

Collections

External links

References

  1. Bell, Eugenia. "Aaron Spangler: Zach Feuer Gallery". Artforum International January 2008
  2. Johnson, Ken. "Aaron Spangler". The New York Times. February 18, 2005 http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9804E6DA103AF93BA25751C0A9639C8B63
  3. Kerr, Merrily. "Recuperating Revolt". Flash Art, June 2004 http://newyorkarttours.com/blog/?p=533
  4. Kerr, Merrily. "Recuperating Revolt". Flash Art, June 2004 http://newyorkarttours.com/blog/?p=533
  5. Wolin, Joseph. "Aaron Spangler: Government Whore". Time Out New York City. May 10, 2010 http://www.timeout.com/newyork/art/aaron-spangler-government-whore
  6. Bell, Eugenia. "Aaron Spangler: Zach Feuer Gallery". Artforum International January 2008
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