
artdaily_NAPLES.- Since the 1960s, Lynda Benglis has pioneered free, ecstatic forms that are simultaneously playful and visceral, organic and abstract. She began her career in the midst of the male-dominated art scene of downtown New York in the late 1960s, which she took by storm with her latex poured fallen paintings, disrupting the hegemony of Pop and Minimalism as well as the genres of painting and sculpture, with inimitable provocation and freedom. Benglis’ performative approach to sculpture-making is deeply original in the way it consistently pushes conventions and revolves around the body, her body—as Benglis has pointed out: ‘she is the form’. Her work—embracing a seemingly boundless variety of materials from beeswax, latex, and polyurethane foam to later innovations with metal, plaster, gold, vaporised metal, glass, ceramics, paper—demonstrates a continued fascination with process, form and movement.
For Spettri, Thomas Dane Gallery in Naples brings together seldom documented features of Benglis’ prolific career: weightlessness and light. Benglis’ historic sparkle works are placed in relation to more recent glitter and paper sculptures, enigmatic light vessels, phosphorescent reliefs and rarely seen carved marble knots from the 1980s. This exhibition attempts to trace a voyage through the plethora of locations that her sculpture evokes: In Naples, from the ghosts of Pompeii to the Secret Cabinet of the Archaeological Museum, but also the places in which she continues to live or make work: New Mexico, New York, Greece, India.
Benglis’ nomadic spirit finds an enriched context in Naples, a city home to complex geological and cultural histories. Spettri is composed from the spectres of this archaeology, but also of her own repertoire and memories: Benglis vividly remembers her maiden boat journey to Europe in 1952, aged 11; her arrival in a pitch-dark Naples, on her way to her ancestral Greece, and the stampede that followed. Nearly 70 years later, she connects the Mediterranean dots again, having just opened a memorable retrospective of her work at the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens. This dialogue reveals a deep reflection on her own practice—its constant metamorphosis, its expanded meanings—given the coalescence of multiple geographies and the alignment of historic and contemporary works. Through texture, form and shape, many of these sculptures inspire animist qualities—that elemental materials and objects possess spiritual essence.
