Berlinde de Bruyckere
LESTEL, 2008, wax, epoxy, iron, wood 

“With Letsel , and like most of Berlinde De Bruyckere’s sculptures, this heap of flesh hanging from “a thread” that is nothing but a butcher’s hook plays on the ambiguity of an animal or human flesh. “No matter,” says the artist, “we are all destined to disappear.” A modern vanity in short.”

—Foundation D’Entreprise Frances

Louise Bourgeois, The Couple, 2003, installed at Mass MoCA, personal photo

“Fabricated in cast aluminum, the two figures in Couple (2003) are meant to hold on to each other for eternity. Bourgeois suffered from a lifelong fear of separation and abandonment, a dread rooted in the events of her early childhood. Made out of various materials and at different scales, and sometimes hanging precariously together from a single wire, Bourgeois’s many couple sculptures express an anxiety defined by the potential loss of the love object. The suspended sculptures also have the capacity to spin in opposite directions, existing in a perpetual state of fragility and ambivalence. Spirals, which abound in Bourgeois’s work and are echoed in the movement of the rotating figures, have duality inherent to their form:

‘The spiral is an attempt at controlling the chaos. It has two directions. Where do you place
yourself, at the periphery or at the vortex? Beginning at the outside is the fear of losing control;
the winding in is a tightening, a retreating, a compacting to the point of disappearance.
Beginning at the center is affirmation, the move outward is a representation of giving, and giving
up control; of trust, positive energy, of life itself.’”