Los Angeles Times

Art Foundry’s brass effect

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Anyone who has spent enough time in Santa Fe, N.M., to witness the indignitie­s to which bronze is routinely subjected there — cast into bucking broncos, Indian warriors, nude women, exotic wildlife, frolicking children and so forth — will find much to appreciate in “Crucible,” a concise survey of multiples created through the 1990s at Art Foundry, a Santa Fe fabricatio­n studio founded in 1980 by Dwight Hackett. (Hackett operated a second foundry in downtown Los Angeles in the late 1980s as well.)

A list of the artists who passed through Art Foundry in its 20-plus years (it closed in 2002) reads like a who’s who of late 20th century American art. The 13 works here — by Bruce Nauman, Susan Rothenberg, Lynda Benglis, Kiki Smith, Rachel Whiteread, Richard Tuttle, Janine Antoni and Ron Cooper — were produced by special invitation through Art Foundry Editions. Most are bronze (a few are silver, iron or steel), cast in small editions at a modest, tabletop scale.

The studio’s reputed capacity for dynamic collaborat­ion is evident in the range and delicacy of this modest selection. From Benglis’ “Ghost Dance,” a lovely tangle of gold-leafed bronze so jaunty and intricate that it might as well have been made from wet clay, to Whiteread’s “Untitled (White),” an exquisitel­y elegant cast steel vessel with white porcelain enamel, each work carries the medium in an its own exciting direction.

Angles Gallery, 2754 S. La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles, (310) 396-5019, through June 30. Closed Sunday and Monday. www.anglesgall­ery.com

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