Sarah Conti’s Expressive Ceramic Birds Migrate Through Social and Environmental Issues

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall.

Detail of “(Im)Migration.” Photo by Rio Chantel. All images © Sarah Conti, shared with permission

In Latin, memento mori translates roughly to “remember you will die” and has been used as a visual trope employed in art for centuries, often in the form of a skull. In 17th-century Vanitas still-life paintings, other symbols like hour glasses, clocks, extinguished candles, fruit, flowers, or game animals were added as a constant reminder of the fleetingness of life. For artist Sarah Conti, the nature of existence is as much a subject as the avians she sculpts. Existing in delicate balance within their increasingly imperiled habitats, she says, “[Birds] can’t evolve at the rate we are changing the world.”

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

Surrounded by family members who were avid birders, the artist traces her interest in the feathered creatures to childhood. The more she learned, the more she admired how birds have captured humankind’s imagination. Later on while enrolled at the University of Montana in Missoula, the onset of the pandemic made the school’s studio spaces inaccessible, prompting her to be outdoors more often. She says, “All the time I used to spend in the studio transitioned into time spent in wetlands and woods looking for birds. I had the time and access to see many new species, and it ignited so much interest and wonder in me.”

 

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall.

“(Im)Migration.” Photo by Rio Chantel

In 2020, Conti began to think about more about the human impact on the environment, as well as political and social issues, finding that the ubiquity of birds—and our endless fascination with the avian world—presented an apt way to express critical concerns. She hones in on the relationship between beauty and discomfort, highlighting dualities of presence and absence or the seen and unseen. For example, “Lost History of Women” illustrates how ornithological study has generally focused on males, paralleling the way women have been omitted from human record.

Conti shapes distinctive birds from clay, often making dozens at a time for large-scale installations. For “(Im)Migration,” she made 75 pieces in about 75 days, which were then given a surface treatment before being fired in the kiln. While each individual component can stand on its own as an independent work, Conti says, “I am very interested in making installation sculpture as a way to tell a larger story, to talk about the massiveness of these issues, and to make the viewer feel enveloped in the work. I want viewers to think about how it relates to their presence and their role in these issues.”

Audubon recently commissioned a piece that will be featured soon in the quarterly’s ongoing series called The Aviaryand next March, Conti will be a part of Radius Gallery’s 9th Annual Ceramics Invitational. Find more on her website and Instagram.

 

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall.

Detail of “(Im)Migration.” Photo by Rio Chantel

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall.

Black-necked Stilt, detail of “(Im)Migration.” Photo by Rio Chantel

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall and a pedestal, connected by threads.

“A(n Extinction) Fable for Tomorrow”

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall.

Detail of “A(n Extinction) Fable for Tomorrow”

An installation of realistic ceramic birds on a pedestal.

Detail of “A(n Extinction) Fable for Tomorrow”

Two detail images of an installation of realistic ceramic birds on a wall and a pedestal, connected by threads.

Two details of “A(n Extinction) Fable for Tomorrow.” Left: Common Nighthawk and extinct Eskimo Curlew. Right: Extinct Carolina Parakeets

An installation of realistic ceramic birds standing on individual wooden shelves. The female bird is portrayed standing on top of the male of the species.

“Lost History of Women”

A ceramic sculpture of a female pheasant standing on a male pheasant.

Ring-necked Pheasant, detail of “Lost History of Women”

A ceramic sculpture of a female Red-naped Sapsucker standing on a male.

Red-naped Sapsucker, detail of “Lost History of Women”

A ceramic sculpture of a female Redhead duck standing on a male.

Redhead Duck, detail of “Lost History of Women”

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Sarah Conti’s Expressive Ceramic Birds Migrate Through Social and Environmental Issues appeared first on Colossal.

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

Source: thisiscolossal.com

No votes yet.
Please wait...
Loading...