Cathy McClure is an American visual artist born in 1965, known for her kinetic sculptures and zoetropic installations. Her works often feature re-engineered mechanical toys, video, sound, strobes, and other lighting effects. McClure's art has been exhibited in museums, galleries, and public spaces around the world.[1][2][3][4]

Early life, education, influences, and artistic practice edit

McClure was born in Abilene, Texas and raised in Jonesboro, Arkansas. She returned to Texas after high school, settling first in Dallas.[5] She attended Texas Tech University where she studied painting, sculpture and metal design. She was particularly inspired by her jewelry design and metalsmithing professor Robly Glover, and her glassblowing professor Bill Bagley.[6] While attending Texas Tech, she co-founded Spiral Glass.[7] She received her BFA in 1995.

Following her undergraduate studies, she relocated to Seattle to attend the University of Washington where she received an MFA in 1997. She has acknowledged influential teachers during her studies at UW – Doug Jeck, Akio Takimori, Shawn Brixey, Mary Lee Hu, and Roger Horner - who all reaffirmed McClure's belief that "there are no boundaries to art-making.”[6]

While metalsmithing is a consistent feature of her work, her artistic practice spans many genres of art-making and is not limited to one artistic discipline. She has been described as an ‘anti-disciplinary artist'.[8]

Awards edit

In 1997, McClure was awarded the 19th annual Betty Bowen Award Grand Prize from the Seattle Art Museum.[9][10][11][12] She was a 2018 Artist In Residence at Pilchuck Glass School, and was awarded an AIR at the Vashon Residency in 2021.[10][6][13]

Exhibitions edit

Early zoetropic installations edit

In 1999, for her first museum solo exhibition, McClure produced a three-part zoetropic installation for the exhibition ‘Team Works' at San Francisco's Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. In one part of the installation, she arranged her silver, copper, brass, and steel abstracted human figures on spinning metal disks which were lit by strobe lights. These figures were described by art critic David Bonetti as "miniature grandchildren of Bauhaus master Oskar Schlemmer's mechano-morphic sculptures.”[14] Her theatrical scene was enhanced by raucous carnival music, creating what Bonetti described as a "visual and aural three-ring circus that scares and delights equally.”[14]

Another of her zoetropic installations, ‘People Doing Things, Shiny Objects, Great Color, Occasional Music', was included in the Bellevue Arts Museum's Pacific Northwest Annual in 2000. The installation's ambiance was furthered by "old-time theater seats, red velvet curtains, and vaudeville music.” Its centerpiece was "a spinning mirrored object around which little figures cartwheel and flip and have televisions dropped on their heads, all intensified by colored lights and strobes.”[15][16]

2000-09 edit

Bots edit

In her 2007 exhibition ‘Menagerie' at Neuhoff Edelman Gallery, New York, McClure introduced her signature ‘Bots' to her carnivalesque zoetropic installation, '3 Ring Circus'. She created her ‘Bots' by deconstructing commercially available plush toys - mechanical elephants, hippos, roosters and other animals. She removed the stuffing from the toys, reconfigured their mechanical components, cast them in metal, and installed them on pedestals. Village Voice critic R.C. Baker noted, "The installation of three zoetropes featured ear-flapping, trunk-waving elephants slowly circling stainless-steel Ferris wheels and merry-go-rounds—the flashing strobe lights and minor-key music leavened big-eyed cuteness with glitzy dystopia.”[17][18]

Mass-produced plush mechanical toys also served as the inspiration and original form for the kinetic sculptures McClure included in ‘Remains', her exhibition at New York's Moss Gallery in 2009.[19] Her ‘half-whimsical, half-disturbing animals' stripped of their coats and stuffing were cast in bronze, their inner mechanisms intact but exposed, she altered the toys' sound and movement controls.[20]

Her ‘Bots' sculptures reveal her fascination with the hidden, inner-workings of mechanical toys meant to be appreciated for their outsides. She remarked in an interview with the Seattle Times, "I was really interested in what I felt that was underneath,” she said. "It's like uncovering an object that wasn't intended to be seen in the first place, that has a beautiful design.”[21][22] The sculptures' metal finishes make evident McClure's background in and appreciation for metalsmithing processes.[23]

In a lecture given at Rhode Island School of Design in 2018, Murray Moss discussed McClure's ‘Bots' noting, "Through metamorphosis they seem to have aged, even wizened…Their new bronze bodies are reductive, sleek, no longer toys concerned with pleasing the viewer, they are robotic creatures of [McClure's] own vision.”[8]

2010-19 edit

In 2011, Washington's Bellevue Arts Museum organized a solo exhibition of McClure's work.[24] Titled ‘Midway', a reference to the traveling carnivals she attended as a child, it included music, whirling lights, futuristic, mechanized toys, a 10' Ferris wheel, and working carousel.[25] Her ‘Bots' featured in the exhibition included mechanical ‘Elmo' and ‘Mickey Mouse' toys "stripped of their commercial identities” and reconfigured by the artist to engage in repetitive motions, which "conjure dreamy cinematic operations and allude to a modern life characterized by escapism, frenzy and consumption."[26] Curator Nora Atkinson remarked, "Midway evokes a fusion of adult and childhood fantasy with somber undertones as though the artist's creatures have run too long unchecked. It speaks of the coming and going of people/fads/phases, of displacement and discontentedness in the modern world, and of being lost in between."[26]

For 'Mickey Hardwired', her 2013 exhibition at Moss Bureau, New York, the artist gathered and arranged an army of mechanical Mickey Mouse toys from which the recognizable, soft outer layer and inner voice mechanisms had been eliminated by the artist. Rewired by McClure to move initially in near-perfect unison, the skeletal Mickeys eventually collide with one another, creating a scene which devolves into whirring, ratcheting, chaos.[27] She also presented her mechanical Mickey Mouse forms in an exhibition at Method Gallery, Seattle.[28]

McClure sources the majority of the toys she uses for her sculptures from thrift stores, which has made her acutely aware of the abundance of cast-off and discarded products which may eventually end up in landfills. The artist's sculptures, videos, and installations highlight this "societal penchant for over-consumption and over-production.”[28] In a review published in ‘Vanguard Seattle', T.s. Flock writes of McClure's ‘Bots', "It's hard to believe that we live in the best of all possible worlds when there is demand for cheap thrills whose plastic corpses will be polluting the oceans long after we're dead. That's not the future we were promised, and these bots are part of the lie. McClure's work reminds us that we are still being duped through with an uncanny tension between sentimentality and waste.”[29]

In her work, McClure also considers the discrepancy between America's idealized dream of a technology-filled future and the reality of our increasingly digital lives.[30] For the artist's 2017 solo exhibition, ‘Dispossessed' held at the Center on Contemporary Art, she sourced used mechanical toys and covered some in gold-leaf, to bring a new attention and value to the toys' existence at a time when there is an evident shift away from physical play toward digital forms of engagement and stimuli occurring.[30] For McClure, the tentative status of toys in the digital era is a metaphor for our own uncertain future.[29]

2020 - current edit

In 2020 McClure displayed her installation 'Re-Imagineering' at the Louise Hopkins Underwood Center for the Arts, and in 2021 at the Texas Tech University, School of Art Studio + Folio Gallery. These exhibitions included the fourth and fifth incarnations of McClure's 'Mickey Hardwired' installation.[31][10]

Public art edit

‘A Place in the Woods', McClure's site-specific Douglas Fir perforated panels designed in collaboration with LMN architects and HLB lighting design was unveiled as a permanent installation in the entryway of the newly constructed Seattle Convention Center Summit Building on January 25, 2023.[32] The light and shadow effect cast by the chandelier is created by forty-five strategically placed perforated wooden panels - the designs of the panels are modeled after the leaves, bark and roots of 13 Pacific Northwest native trees as seen through a microscope. The artwork was conceived by the artist to evoke the effect of sun dappling through a tree canopy.[2]

Personal life edit

Cathy McClure lives and works in Seattle, Washington.

References edit

  1. ^ "Cathy McClure - 1 Artwork, Bio & Shows on Artsy". www.artsy.net. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  2. ^ a b Vansynghel, Margo. "Seattle's new convention center features $7.75M in local art | Crosscut". crosscut.com. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  3. ^ "List of Artists on the Public Artist Roster". ArtsWA. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  4. ^ Graham, Tennyson (2021-08-03). "You can enjoy cocktails and mini golf at the Olympic Sculpture Park this month". Curiocity. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  5. ^ Mustafa, Maheen (2019-07-20). "Cathy Mcclure's "MICKEY HARDWIRED"". Maheen The Globe. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  6. ^ a b c Wynkoop, Gena (2019-03-23). "Artist of the Week: Cathy McClure". Seattle Refined. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  7. ^ Staff, Advocate (2005-08-01). "Spiral Glass". Lakewood/East Dallas. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  8. ^ a b Zeiba, Drew (2018-12-17). "Design legend Murray Moss discusses the future of "anti-disciplinarity"". The Architect’s Newspaper. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  9. ^ "Artist Opportunities- SAM - Seattle Art Museum". www.seattleartmuseum.org. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  10. ^ a b c "McClure: Re-Imagineering | Landmark Arts | School of Art | TTU". www.depts.ttu.edu. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  11. ^ Updike, Robin (March 12, 1998). "McClure's Magic Circus". The Seattle Times. pp. G17.
  12. ^ Updike, Robin (November 30, 1997). "A shadow reality in a trick of the light". The Seattle Times. pp. M10.
  13. ^ "Alumni". Vashon Artist Residency. Retrieved 2023-03-11.
  14. ^ a b Bonetti, David (1999-07-06). "Art as a team effort". SFGATE. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  15. ^ Hall, Emily. "Tinkerer's Toy". The Stranger. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  16. ^ Hall, Emily. "The Better Annual". The Stranger. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  17. ^ Baker, R. C. (2007-11-20). "Lynne Cohen's Bubble Chairs, Emilie Clark's 'The Weeklies,' Thomas Demand's 'Yellowcake'". The Village Voice. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  18. ^ Hutson, Laura. "Studio Visit: Cathy McClure". Nashville Scene. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  19. ^ Viladas, Pilar (2009-11-18). "Now Showing | Stuffed Animals, Cuddly No More". T Magazine. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  20. ^ Green, Penelope (2009-11-26). "Holiday Gifts With a Story to Tell". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  21. ^ "How Seattle artist Cathy McClure makes metal art". The Seattle Times. 2014-12-05. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  22. ^ Robotic art reveals beauty beneath toys, retrieved 2023-03-10
  23. ^ Metcalf, Bruce (November 2009). "Remains: Cathy McClure". Metalsmith. 30 (3): 55.
  24. ^ "Cathy McClure: Midway". bellevuearts.org. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  25. ^ Keith, Kelsey. "The Ringmaster (3 Photos)". Dwell. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  26. ^ a b "Seattle artist Cathy McClure reveals newest installation at Bellevue Arts Museum". Bellevue, WA Patch. 2011-05-12. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  27. ^ MICKEY HARDWIRED, retrieved 2023-03-10
  28. ^ a b "Pioneer Square Art Walk: December 2014". Vanguard Seattle. 2014-12-08. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
  29. ^ a b "Art in Focus: Cathy McClure's "State of the Union" at CoCA". Vanguard Seattle. 2018-01-04. Retrieved 2023-03-11.
  30. ^ a b "Dispossessed". CoCA Seattle. Retrieved 2023-03-11.
  31. ^ "Past 2020". LHUCA. Retrieved 2023-03-11.
  32. ^ Welch, Adrian (2023-03-07). "Seattle Convention Center Summit Building". e-architect. Retrieved 2023-03-11.