something powerful is about evoking an unnameable emotion - including possibilities that it not only arises before form but that perhaps remains that way; the formless state of something that can only be described as an emotion and yet relates not to anything the viewer has before experienced; this is like the vessel for holding you drinking water, as among the most precious encounters are those that can hold us in an unnameable place, confounding our interpretation, while the well to our souls remains open and flowing, bringing the matter of depth to the open surface, to live with us, to breathe in the same space and become part of what we breathe, and alter the meaning of life given by those so exposed.
your work accomplishes that, for any brave enough to sit long enough with it.
Natasha Maria Brooks-Sperduti uses the motion of her body to make site specific sculpture and installation. Her work reflects the gesture of it's own making, tracing along a boundary between our tangible world and another, less visible reality. Natasha is a Providence resident and RI native. She has shown in New York and London, and holds a Bachelors' Degree in Studio Art from Bard College.
Natasha is a community ritual and event planner, a yogi, a teacher and writer as well as an artist.
1 comment:
on paragraph 3..
something powerful is about evoking an unnameable emotion - including possibilities that it not only arises before form but that perhaps remains that way; the formless state of something that can only be described as an emotion and yet relates not to anything the viewer has before experienced; this is like the vessel for holding you drinking water, as among the most precious encounters are those that can hold us in an unnameable place, confounding our interpretation, while the well to our souls remains open and flowing, bringing the matter of depth to the open surface, to live with us, to breathe in the same space and become part of what we breathe, and alter the meaning of life given by those so exposed.
your work accomplishes that, for any brave enough to sit long enough with it.
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