Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Carole A. Feuerman Casts Her Hyperreal Swimmers in Classical Narratives

Carole A. Feuerman's hyperrealistic sculptures of graceful human subjects like swimmers, divers, and dancers, featured here, are undeniably lifelike. But they are also magical in their dreamy state. Her sculptures also capture something that isn't real in the tangible sense, and that is the soul and emotion of a living person. Some call it "super-realism", but in Feuerman's words: "My sculptures combine both reality and illusion- I'm idealizing the human form, its not life as it really is."

Carole A. Feuerman’s hyperrealistic sculptures of graceful human subjects like swimmers, divers, and dancers, featured here, are undeniably lifelike. But they are also magical in their dreamy state. Her sculptures also capture something that isn’t real in the tangible sense, and that is the soul and emotion of a living person. Some call it “super-realism”, but in Feuerman’s words: “My sculptures combine both reality and illusion- I’m idealizing the human form, its not life as it really is.”

Feuerman is perhaps best known for her series of swimmers and bathers, a series she first began in the 1970s and continues to expand on today. Clad in 1920s style bathing suits, her swimmers are cast in the role of classical and mythological figures in her upcoming solo, “Hero and Leander” opening on May 6th at C24 Gallery in New York City.


Artist Carole A. Feuerman, with her sculpture “DurgaMa”.

The exhibit takes its name from her monumental sized bronze pieces, “Monumental Dancer” and “Beyond the Golden Mean”, representing the Greek mythological story of Hero and Leander. Other new works include “Leda and the Swan”, portrayed reclining on a giant, inflatable swan, and “DurgaMa”, the Hindu goddess who blossoms from an impressive lotus flower, and a symbol of birth, rebirth and survival, all themes in Feuerman’s work.

“Conceptually, the biggest challenge is to portray the strength of the human spirit,” says Feuerman. “Making a sculpture that is hyperrealistic is not just captured by outward perception, not merely defined by physical forms and spatial fields that blend together but also by interrelationships composed as much by the unseen as by the seen. In the end, it’s like a melting pot, where physicality, sensuality, perfection, and vitality become one.”

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Hans Hemmert uses balloon sculptures to explore the idea of space and form, having the objects take the place of human figures and massive structures. The artist evolved from the human-sized, yellow works of the 1990s to a recent assemblage that takes the shape of an enormous tank.
Ronald Gonzalez’s “Heads” series, combining found objects, metal filings, glue, wire, wax, and soot over welded steel, is a collection of haunting sculptures. The artist, based in upstate New York, is able to pull from several cultures and time periods in creating these strange works.
Sculptor Sophie Prestigiacomo reflects our ongoing and tense dialogue with nature with her swamp creatures in the Marshes Nature Reserve of Séné in the Gulf of Morbihan in France. It began with two mysterious beings a few years ago, and after they departed, a recent crowdfunding campaign to bring eight total to the reserve. Or as the campaign stated (as translated from French): “more numerous, more curious and probably convinced by the first visit of their two ambassadors, there was a relationship tie with the human species.”
In Katja Novitskova's recent, massive installation, "Invasion Curves," the artist offers an environment with creatures taken straight out of nature and the laboratory. The recent exhibition at Whitechapel Gallery offered a fictional landscape facing a "biotic crisis" (or a period of mass extinction), "where imaging and technology are used in a process of mapping the exploitation of life," the gallery says.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List