Regarding Kites
Artist’s Statement
I began experimenting with kites in the early 1990's as a means to explore
the complex relationship between wind and land. Working in the field,
watching prototypes drive themselves into the ground time and again, I
soon realized the scope of my endeavor.
The kite is a deceptively simple object. Its technology is modest and
refined, the result of a two thousand year evolution. Yet within this
elegant form, I find a remarkable artistic model. The kite contains no
redundant parts, its construction is based on the simultaneous demands
of light weight and structural integrity. It is, in Corbusier's words,
"a machine for flying.” The success or failure of this object
is determined by its ability to relate to the wind, a force over which
we exercise little control or influence. The process of building and flying
kites exposes vital relationships between artist and environment, form
and space, nature and culture. The terms of the art-making process are
dramatically altered when the work is defined by its ability to interact
with natural systems. I am drawn to the temporal and collaborative nature
of this genre. To place a kite in the sky and feel it respond to the ever
changing wind sets up a rewarding dialogue between artist and place.
|