Details
MaterialGallery
polycarbonate, solventHannah Hoffman Gallery
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.
"Loop 238" by Olga Balema features a transparent, crumpled material atop a minimalist white pedestal, creating a striking interplay of light and shadow. The sculpture evokes a sense of fragility and impermanence, with its jagged, irregular contours. Balema’s style reflects postminimalism, emphasizing materials and form, and she utilizes transparency to suggest vulnerability. This piece continues her exploration of tension and material contrast, echoing the delicate balance seen in her other works. ...
Olga Balema’s artworks are an investigation of form. They are characterised by a tense relationship and contrasts in materiality, often comprising a hard framework with soft, fragile innards. Balema frequently employs latex which, especially in Bread for Life (2016), is held taut and barbed by jagged steel rods, or perhaps armatures, recalling Eva Hesse’s postminimalist practice and the slow sagging of the material over time. The notion of tension – perhaps most commonly, representations of the contrast between the hard bones of a human skeleton and the flesh that furnishes it – are further echoed in the rubber bands and shoelaces plotting a geometry across the gallery floor in brain damage (2019), the teetering globules of latex, moulded to look like breasts, protruding from the globe in 2016’s Globe, tacked on unsteadily, and the soft PVC sacks filled with steel rods and water, ready to burst, in Threat to Civilization 2 (2015). ...