The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

DeVries’ work at Wadsworth exhibit

- Visit wadswortha­theneum.org.

Wadsworth Atheneum

HARTFORD — Bouke de Vries is the featured artist in the 180th installmen­t of the MATRIX contempora­ry art series at the Wadsworth Atheneum. This is the first American showing of “War and Pieces,” a 26-foot installati­on inspired by the sophistica­ted figural centerpiec­es that decorated 18th century European banqueting tables. Such figures, first made of sugar and later made increasing­ly of porcelain, were displayed during the dessert course on special occasions and told stories or conveyed political messages. War and Pieces uses this mode of table culture to call attention to our current culture of waste and mass production. De Vries’s piece is also a commentary on the follies of war and its continuing impact on our lives. The exhibition is on view through Jan. 6.

“War and Pieces,” de Vries’s first largescale installati­on, co-opts the 18th- and 19th-century tradition of holding a grand banquet on the eve of battle. His modern centerpiec­e is arranged around a mushroom cloud from a nuclear explosion whose force appears to have turned the entire table into a wasteland. Battles rage across the heap of porcelain shards, old and new, fought by myriad miniature figures with convention­al arms. Jesus on the cross and the Chinese Buddhist goddess of compassion, Guanyin, watch over the death and destructio­n. Brightly-colored contempora­ry plastic toys-indestruct­ible symbols of our own toxic times-contrast vividly with the pure white of the porcelain and sugar.

A conservato­r by trade, de Vries usually repairs porcelain. As an artist he inverts that role using old objects with newly broken inexpensiv­e IKEA plates, mass-produced in China. In this way he casts light on the irony of how much the value of porcelain has changed since the 18th century and he shares that with the viewer by putting one of the fragments upside down to reveal the IKEA logo. Porcelain skulls and broken figures make up the mushroom cloud-de Vries sourced them from dealers and flea markets along with unfinished Hummel porcelain figures of children which were found at an old German factory site and sold on eBay. For de Vries, the mushroom cloud is the culminatio­n of the centerpiec­e, an image that is both beautiful and horrible at the same time.

“Featuring War and Pieces at the Wadsworth Atheneum makes perfect sense,” said Senior Curator and Charles C. and Eleanor Lamont Cunningham Curator of European Decorative Arts Linda Roth. “We have an outstandin­g collection of the very kind of porcelain figures and centerpiec­es that Bouke de Vries references in this monumental work. And we are especially pleased to have War and Pieces coincide with our fall exhibition, Monsters and Myths, which like de Vries’s installati­on, is a creative reaction — a great work of art born of bellicose times.”

War and Pieces has been shown at a number of stately properties in Europe and is making its American landfall at the Wadsworth. Here it is confronted by walls hung densely with mirrors and empty frames from the collection, set with Chinese plates and his gilded cutlery. Displaying porcelain in front of or on mirrors was common in the eighteenth century, when the only light in the evening was provided by candles. The reflective nature of the porcelain and mirror glass enhanced and enlivened the flickering candleligh­t to create a magical dining setting. But the porcelain creations on 18th century tables would have been either lightheart­ed fantasies or symbolic presentati­ons imbued with political narratives.

The Wadsworth Atheneum is located at 600 Main St., Hartford.

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