SANDRA EULA LEE: Make of / Make do
Dec 27, 2016 — May 06, 2017
Guest Curated by Dr. Christopher Bennett
Lee’s installations incorporate sculptural, photographic, and drawing traditions to consider ways in which place is created among changing urban and environmental conditions. The sculptures and installations she constructs are informed by her observations of daily life and through the collecting and reconfiguring of the materials that pass through it.
This solo exhibition marks Lee's first in Louisiana and is guest curated by Dr. Christopher Bennett, UL Lafayette Art History professor in the Department
of Visual Arts. It is accompanied by a new publication by the museum, also authored by Bennett, which features an analysis and catalog of Lee's recent
artworks.
Curatorial Statement:
Sandra Eula Lee makes use of ordinary, and at times site-specific, materials to construct two- and three- dimensional arrangements. Currently the director
of the Expanded Sculpture Program at Kenyon College in Ohio, Lee uses materials salvaged from construction sites in her art. Working with materials
gathered during travels through South Korea, China, and the United States, she configures work that explores the theme of the “garden”—principally
as an East Asian formation—and the “ponds” often located within them.
As a former resident of five bustling cities—Goyang, Seoul, Xiamen, Beijing, and New York City—where Lee lived between 2000 and 2015, Lee experienced
a larger atmosphere defined by accelerated modernization and continual construction. She was especially struck by small, ‘impromptu’ gardens, created
and tended by anonymous civilians, located between the many construction zones and apartment blocks and along the peripheries of such places. Soon,
she began to think about how the “garden” might be brought to bear on making a work of art.
As an artist Lee conceives the “garden” as a space of contemplation; it is also, like life itself, in her estimation, “improvised.” Inspired by more
formal gardens, such as Soswaewon Garden in South Korea or The Master of Nets Garden in Suzhou, China, Lee is particularly drawn to the ponds located
within gardens. She describes such a pond as “almost a kind of empty space, reflecting what’s around it.”
The exhibition Make of / Make do surveys Lee’s production from 1997 to 2014 and includes her most recent works of 2015-17. In these later
pieces, the themes of her earlier “gardens” and “ponds” undergo projection onto the vertical plane of the wall and onto new landscape features, such
as mountains.
Lee’s art is defined by a dynamic tension between the spontaneous and potentially endless process of making use of salvaged and commonly available
materials—and the arrival at a finely-tuned, definitive external structure.
Dr. Christopher Bennett
Guest Curator and UL Lafayette Department of Visual Arts Faculty
Acknowledgements:
Sandra Eula Lee: Make of / Make do has been generously supported by the Department of Visual Arts and College of the Arts at the University
of Louisiana at Lafayette; Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio; and the Friends of the Humanities.