Los Angeles Times
Friday, May 23, 1997

Prizing an Animated Approach to Life
by David Pagel - Special to The Times

For Daniel Wiener, drawings rarely serve such preparatory purposes. Rather than tracing the stages of an idea's development, the New York-based sculptor's images are complete unto themselves. At Angles Gallery, eight works form the last three years playfully demonstrate that when intuitions take shape, it doesn't matter what stage of the process they spring from.

 

Each of Wiener's abstract drawings sprouts a fully formed sculptural element. At the bottom of "Tohu and Bohu," a curved funnel-like flourish proturdes form the paper's surface, effectively transforming the washy blue drawing's vertical stripes into a downpour of color that threatens to spill onto your shoes.

 

"Lucifer's Teeth" embodies a similar menace. A section of its left edge bends back and thickens to form a toothy, lip-curling smirk that is only thinly disguised by its pastel blue color. Only half-jokingly. Wiener's drawing also suggests that if it isn't itself devilish, then some unseen being has just taken a bite out of it-and might be lurking nearby.

 

The best works evoke multiple responses as they compress three diminesions into two. From across the gallery, the seven hefty thorns that stud the suface of "Affliction" disappear into dark smudges of color. Likewise four unsavory lumps of sculpted plastic hide in a shadowy splash of black paint to give the otherwise elegant composition of "Shame" a jolt of unexpected tactility.

 

"Cigarette,""Brigand,""Shiver" and "Slippery Slope" add wire, rice paper and color photographs to Wiener's crafty fusions. Sculpted roots, stumps and thumbs, as well as flowers, fungi, and tiny wilted barbells inhabit the ever-shifting world of these quietly perverse works. Never striving for solutions, Wiener's 3-D Drawings show that the kinks are often more stimulating.

 

Angles Gallery, 222 Main St., Santa Monica.
(310) 396 -5019

Reviews/Articles

Bomb Magazine

I am very pleased that Alexander Ross wrote about my work in the Artists on Artists series in the most recent issue of Bomb Magazine.

Also included in the Artists on Artists series are the great sculptors, Michelle Segre and Sheila Pepe. It is an honor to be in the same issue with them.

An Ethos of Industrious Neurosis

by David Brody, ArtCritical.com
David Brody, in a wonderful article, writes "Wiener's exploratory, morph-or-die universe is the reverse of our inertial one: objects never remain at rest."

A Mess of Art

by Blake Gopnik, The Daily Beast

Haiku Review

by Peter Frank, The Huffington Post

Words with the Artist: Daniel Wiener, Part 1 and Part 2

by Jessica Pleasants, FXFOWLE

Daniel Wiener at Calvin Morris Gallery

by Ephraim Birnbaum, Romanov Grave

Interview

Making is Thinking Video Tour

by James Kalm/Lauren Monk, ArtReview.com
A walk-through of my recent show at Lesley Heller Workspace, in April.

Galleries

Lesley Heller Workspace

54 Orchard Street
New York, NY 10002
t 212 410 6120

ArtWeLove

Three Editions
Sculpture, Adrift
Near the Ruins of the Sutro Baths
Red Leaf

ArtWeLove presents "curated limited editions, by some of the best artists living today, irresistibly priced for every budget."

Exhibitions

Seating Arrangements

curated by Mary Heilmann featuring works by Don Christensen, Mary Heilmann, Kurt Gumaer and Daniel Wiener

August 11 - September 11, 2012

ILLE Arts 216a Main Street
Amagansett, NY
11930

Diversities of Sculpture/Derivations from Nature

curated by Bonnie Rychlak
April 28th – October 7th, 2012

LongHouse Reserve 2012
133 Hands Creek Road
East Hampton, New York 11937
Please check the website for hours and directions.

Materials

Apoxie Sculpt

Apoxie-Sculpt is a self-hardening clay manufactured by Aves Studios.

Polytek - Liquid Mold Rubber

I use Polytek 74-30 for poured rubber molds and Polygel 40 or 50 for brush-on molds.

Aqua-Resin

Aqua-Resin (created by an artist) is an easy to use, opaque, non-toxic composite fabricating resin. It is usually used as a casting material but I use it direct, either brushing it or pouring it over a form.

Pilchuck

All the glass seen in my sculptures was produced at Pilchuck Glass School over several weeks during an artist-in-residency. Pilchuck, generously, asks artists to their campus to explore what glass can do. It was a tremendous and productive experience.