Robert Burnier
Region: Midwest
I create using what I call an “anti-maquette” process, where the
model does not lead to an expected result so much as it provides
conditions for one. Sculpting the path of a visual landscape
by bending, shaping, and warping a material, I emphasize a
nonlinear, unpredictable relationship between one plateau of
transformation and another. Materials offer resistance when
manipulated, forcing me to navigate unknown territory through
each object’s creation. The specific nature and preconfiguration
of each material becomes a historical fact I have to wrestle with.
For titles, I often make use of L. L. Zamenhof’s utopian language
of Esperanto, developed in the late nineteenth century. Esperanto
borrows from existing linguistic traditions in the hopes of
providing a bridge for communication. This organic approach
is appealing in its attempt at universality without erasure, not
requiring a blank slate, just as I begin with a set structure of
material in the work. Failed utopias and the impossibility of
communion with the absolute are not just philosophical but also
practical concerns, in that they are apparitions haunting society.