top of page

Helaine Blumenfeld – Intimacy and Isolation

Updated: Nov 30, 2023


Helaine Blumenfeld - JM Art Management
Helaine Blumenfeld

Helaine Blumenfeld – Intimacy and Isolation

Esteemed sculptor Helaine Blumenfeld's last exhibition of both new and earlier works that focus on her anxiety and her hope for the times in which we live. Mostly conceived in lockdown and created in 2022, these new, small-scale abstract sculptures are the result of an extended sculptural vocabulary and approach intimacy both as a personal as well as a global phenomenon.

At the height of the pandemic, Helaine Blumenfeld recalled a time when, as a young girl, she visited her uncle’s campsite. One evening, during a large meeting, it suddenly became dark, and everyone was issued with a candle and a match. “We discovered that by everybody lighting that little candle, we were sitting in a floodlight, and I think somehow that message might have got lost.”

The recollection represented something of an epiphany. Stripped by virtue of pandemic lockdowns, of deadlines, commitments and the ability to travel between her studios in Cambridge and Pietrasanta in Italy, Blumenfeld embarked on a sustained period of creativity, remarkable for someone now in their 80s.


JM Art Management - Helaine Blumenfeld
The Light Within: Intimacy and Isolation

The message is about discovering the light within us, the light she believes each of us has that defines us as individuals and communities. Yet that light needs to be developed in order to illuminate others. The idea is expressed beautifully in the eponymous work The Light Within: Intimacy and Isolation (above) in which Blumenfeld has carved the two marble elements so thinly so as to render them translucent, making the light appear to emanate from both without and within.

Helaine Blumenfeld has long used her sculptures to express deeply held convictions born from soul searching. In previous works, she has visualized her concern at the direction society is taking – that despite technology making us more connected, we have become lonelier, more impersonal, and more anxious. Isolation rather than empathy is the result of our digital world. Sliding towards a precipice is how she has put it.


JM Art Management - Helaine Blumenfeld
Empathy

Nevertheless, there is hope and now her theme of intimacy has extended to the wider world, beyond the exploration of personal relationships to consider the relationships within and between societies. She expresses the need for greater knowledge and an increased sense of community. “It means changing your perspective so that you can begin to understand where someone else is coming from,” she tells me. “And that means shedding a light on who they are.”

Her theme is expressed through several media – marble, bronze, wood, and terracotta – and each with hints of the human form, some simple, some elaborate but all exploring the light that gives our life meaning.


JM Art Management - Helaine Blumenfeld
Explosion

JM Art Management - Helaine Blumenfeld
Together After the Storm

Sometimes she might give a bronze work a rough texture with the familiar blue-green patina that suggests abrasion and conflict, as with Explosion (above) or the idea of reconciliation and resolution in the cedar wood sculpture Together After the Storm (also above), with its pronounced grain.

There is a tension between the sharp edges and the smoothness of form, echoing the uneasy atmosphere that increasing isolation brings. Yet as with all her work, there is a tactility and a graceful elegance that offers hope and draws you in. Through their layers, folds, shapes, perspectives, and textures, these table-top, intimate sculptures represent so much of the human condition.

She pursues her theme also through maquettes for large-scale works such as Taking Risks (2020), Metamorphosis (2018), and Fortuna (2016).

Helaine Blumenfeld has more than 90 monumental sculptures to her name in private collections and public spaces worldwide and is one of the leading sculptors in the UK. Intimacy and Isolation is a chance to see small-scale artworks that raise questions and raise the spirit in the way that good art can do.


* All images are courtesy of Helaine Blumenfeld


Written by Bob Chaundy



 

JM Art Management


 
122 views0 comments
bottom of page