Los Angeles Times

Tender film of timber artist

Daniel Traub’s ‘Ursula von Rydingsvar­d: Into Her Own’ surveys the sculptor’s lively work.

- By Kevin Crust

In just under an hour, “Ursula von Rydingsvar­d: Into Her Own” manages to cover nearly 80 years in the life of the vibrant sculptor whose work-intensive art draws directly from nature and is then forged into almost mythologic­al creations. While director Daniel Traub has little time to dive too deeply, the documentar­y serves as a fascinatin­g glimpse into an artist’s work, inspiratio­ns and process.

Born in Germany in 1942, the daughter of an abusive Ukrainian father and a loving Polish mother, Von Rydingsvar­d spent five years in camps for displaced persons before the large family immigrated to working-class Plainview, Conn. As a young woman, she worked as a teacher but eventually found herself as a single mother in 1970s New York City, an especially fertile place and time to be an artist.

This background proves intrinsic to Von Rydingsvar­d’s work. The nearly all-wood environmen­t of the camps informed her use of timber as a primary material (cedar is a favorite). A later in life visit to Poland and its forests suggest an even deeper connection. Her father’s cruelty fueled her ambition and a shared work ethic (he often held down two factory jobs), as she overcame a hardscrabb­le start, earned an MFA from Columbia and establishe­d herself in the art world.

Much of Von Rydingsvar­d’s work is on a massive, primal scale, requiring collaborat­ion with her team of assistants who appear devoted to their craft, even sharing family-style meals with their boss. (In a quirk of timing, the fact that Von Rydingsvar­d and her team often wear masks while working makes even the archival footage feel eerily contempora­ry.)

While we hear from a variety of people, including Von Rydingsvar­d’s brother Stas Karoliszyn, her daughter Ursie, her second husband, Nobel Prize-winning biochemist Paul Greengard (who died in 2019), fellow artists Judy Pfaff and Elka Krajewska, curators and arts patrons, the film’s real strength is that so much of it is in the artist’s own voice.

Traub (director of the 2014 documentar­y “The Barefoot Artist” on Lily Yeh) also serves as cinematogr­apher and was previously commission­ed by Von Rydingsvar­d for a short film. Here, he allows his camera to carefully survey the work, especially in sequences documentin­g a large-scale commission from Princeton that witness the artist working with a new medium — hand-pounded copper — with the help of metals fabricator Richard Webber.

Whether distressin­g materials, wielding a tool or caressing a finished work (she invariably uses female pronouns when referring to her pieces), Von Rydingsvar­d reveals its intimacy and tactility regardless of the scale. This is work you want to touch, and despite that being one of the less cinematic senses, “Ursula Von Rydingsvar­d: Into Her Own” evokes that quality to a surprising degree.

 ?? Daniel Traub ?? URSULA VON RYDINGSVAR­D in her Williamsbu­rg studio in 2002 with cedar casts of “katul katul.”
Daniel Traub URSULA VON RYDINGSVAR­D in her Williamsbu­rg studio in 2002 with cedar casts of “katul katul.”

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