Working Table

Gabriel Orozco Mexican

Not on view

A significant work within Orozco’s oeuvre, this major installation belongs to his ongoing series of Working Tables started at the beginning of his career, around 1991. They consist of heterogenous displays of objects gathered over a period of time in a variety of media: mock-ups and models, ideas for sculptures that may not have taken hold, found objects, and natural materials. They act as repositories of the artist’s creative process, choice of materials, and technical methods. For this Working Table, Orozco assembled more than 700 pieces made across his studios in France, Japan, Mexico, and Bali, which can be scrutinized according to groups or series. Several glazed ceramic and unfired clay objects were directly inspired by the surrounding natural landscape of the artist’s studio in Saint Fargeau, France. Delicate imprints of dry leaves and flowers or dead insects on clay tablets resemble prehistoric fossils. Stone pieces carved with geometric motifs from his studio in Mexico were influenced by the sculptural idiom of the Aztecs. A group of wooden objects were created in his Bali studio where the artist sketched the mythical creatures depicted in Balinese wood carvings. Other components, arranged roughly following a taxonomic system, include metal tools, bamboo strips, chromed aluminum sculptures, plastic replicas of food, cast whale bones, and gouaches on paper. The result is no less than the redefinition of sculpture’s confines.

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