Lucy Hodgson
Lucy Hodgson is an American sculptor and printmaker based in the New England and New York City. For years, her work celebrated the emotive power of land and seascapes. More recently it focused on her anger and disapproval of the destruction of the environment, particularly by the oil and gas industry and the recent controversy surrounding fracking and the Keystone Pipeline.and the devastation of ancient monuments in the Middle East.
Early life and career
Hodgson attended Oberlin College and earned an M.A. in Anthropology at New York University. Her background in anthropology was highly influential because it seemed to better address the relationship between art and culture than more traditional academic art curricula. Hodgson was fascinated by the impermanent materials used to create artifacts in pre-literate societies, and by how much care went into the creation of such ephemeral art objects. She is similarly unconcerned with the impermanence of many of her works; they are intended to weather and rot, and remind the viewer of the brevity of life.Early in her career, the artist worked and gained skills at The Printmaking Workshop in New York City. Hodgson taught printmaking there as at Franklin and Marshall College
Work
Media and materials
During the 1980s through 2009, Hodgson often reconstituted building materials, in addition to natural materials such a wooden stumps, twigs, and reeds. These are combined to address the "conversion of natural elements into ones that will destroy the world as we know it," as in the juxtaposition of dying trees laden with industrial steel pipes and other human-made material. The tension between human intention and natural forces is a repeated motif in her body of work. In printmaking, Hodgson's works are limited to small editions, as she is opposed to mass production.Site-specific works and assemblages
Lucy Hodgson's work is heavily influenced by nature. For Standing Remains: Remains Standing, a site-specific work in West Kingston, Rhode Island at the South County Center for the Arts, Hodgson utilized a thirteen-foot-high maple tree trunk that was damaged by a hurricane. The piece was abstract, and she worked organically while carving into it with only hand tools, following the tree's natural shape, as opposed to having a fixed form in her mind. The trunk was still rooted and alive, which provided extra challenges in the work, but was characteristic of her interest in organic forms and natural forces. She acknowledged that the trunk was impermanent, and certainly subject to change through the passage of time, but rejected the idea that art must be permanent. Hodgson has remarked that she is interested in trees "for their very anthropomorphic qualities."Rhyming the River, an assemblage exhibited in Summer Show at the Tamarack Gallery, is a wall-mounted, horizontal triptych of cutout, interlocking wooden designs. As described by one reviewer, "While the negative spaces of the cutouts, and their overlapping shadows, create three-dimensional rhythms, the short, straight wood-grain lines offer a two-dimensional counterpoint."