| Maxe
Fisher : ICE
Wellington
Waterfront (near Barnett St), September 5th-8th 2004
With ICE,
Maxe Fisher has chosen to place a 1m3 ton of ice along the
waterfront where fishing launches used to land their catch.
It situates the work within the history of the fishing industry
in Wellington while expressing a personal state of being in-between.
ICE
references the constant invisible presence of water vapour
since Fisher’s arrival in Wellington. The cubic metre
of ice has been constructed from water collected by her dehumidifier,
and then frozen as a cultural symbol of her origins.
From the artist's statement
The transitory nature of the ice signifies the disappearance
of the meaning of place and draws attention to the mutation
of memory through the transformation of the cube of ice
as it slowly dissolves. The apparent solidity
and transparency of this cube inverses the sense of the transparent acrylic
Art Box, which is in fact, empty. It is only walls. Intentional to this
project is the inversion and deconstruction of the seemingly solid geometry
of the Art Box into an object that is seemingly a mass, yet, is not. The
cube as a form or container derived from minimalism reflects the concept
of a cube as a space for art.
Integral to the
work is the performative element of the installation and conclusion of
a single ton of ice through the temporal element of its natural and gradual
transition from ice to water and vapour. As the cube gradually melts and
reaches an appropriate dimension and weight, it will be pushed and shifted
into the harbour waters, a place to arrival and departure, of coming and
going.
ICE
is a continuation of Maxe Fisher’s investigations
into the cube as a form of artistic expression. AU,
a recent installation of a reflective industrial-gold glass
cube in a public space in Montreal, referenced the gold
mining history along the Cadillac Fault in eastern Canada.
Fisher has exhibited throughout Quebec and Ontario and holds
an MFA from Concordia University, Montreal, She currently
lectures at Victoria University School of Design in Wellington.
|