York University Artist-in-Residence Rona Pondick makes Canadian Debut with Public Lecture at AGO

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TORONTO,  May 21, 2004 – York University will host renowned American sculptor Rona Pondick as the L.L. Odette Visiting Artist from June 7-11. Pondick will launch her residency with a free public lecture about her recent work on June 7 at the Art Gallery of Ontario.

“Pondick was invited because she is an exciting artist of international stature with a highly original and provocative artistic vision,” said Yvonne Singer, director of York's Graduate Program in Visual Arts, who is organizing the residency and lecture.

Pondick has risen to international prominence with distinctive works that incorporate unconventional materials and innovative artistic processes. Her arresting cast metal sculptures  seamlessly fuse parts of the artist’s body – teeth, hands, legs, head – with sculpted animal forms. These startling hybrids delve into the nature of metamorphosis, conjuring disconcerting questions in a world where genetic engineering is a reality.

In her current work, Pondick combines traditional modeling, carving and casting techniques with a groundbreaking use of digital technology. Using stereolithography (3-D layering digital technology), the artist shrinks her life casts, building miniature wax replicas of her body parts that can be as small as one inch. This leading-edge process allows her to maintain incredible detail in her works.

 “Her sculptures are beautiful, strange, disturbing and fascinating,” said Margo Crutchfield, senior curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland, where Pondick’s work is currently on display. “…Pondick probes the recesses of the human psyche and takes on the increasingly mutable nature of human existence as we venture into the 21st century.”

For the past two decades, Pondick has exhibited her work in art museums and galleries in the US, Europe, Japan, South Africa and China and Japan. She has had numerous solo exhibitions and has participated in more than 150 group shows including the Venice, Johannesburg and Lyon Biennales. Her work is found in many prestigious public collections, among them the Museum of Modern Art and Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. She currently lives and works in New York City.

Pondick’s residency at York and her public presentation at the AGO on June 7 mark her debut on the Canadian art scene. During her visit, she will be working with ten students enrolled in an intensive hands-on course in York’s sculpture studio, advising them on their projects, overseeing the bronze casting of their works and components of several of her own pieces in the foundry, and sharing insights into her artistic practice.

“Her residency offers students a unique opportunity to learn about her work in a masterclass situation”, said Singer. “We are extremely fortunate to have her in the foundry workshop at York University.”

The L.L. Odette Centre for Sculpture at York is one of the finest facilities in North America for teaching and research in sculpture. Named in honour of its major benefactor, Toronto businessman and philanthropist Louis L. Odette, the centre houses a state-of-the-art ceramic shell lost wax bronze foundry with additional facilities for bonded sand casting.


Pondick’s artist-in-residency
is made possible through the generous support of Louis L. Odette, the founder of the Toronto Sculpture Garden and longstanding friend of the Faculty of Fine Arts at York. This is the third year of the L.L. Odette Artist-in-Residency program at York.

Pondick’s public talk will take place on Monday, June 7 at 7 pm in the Education Theatre at the Art Gallery of Ontario, 317 Dundas St. West. Admission is free.

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For photos of Podick’s work or to arrange an interview, contact:

Mary-Lou Schagena

Communications, Faculty of Fine Arts

York University

416 736 2100 ext. 20421

schagena@yorku.ca