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At first glance,
Brian Burkhardt's sculptures of plants and animals look as if
they belong in a botanical garden instead of a contemporary art gallery. The
hyacinth, the starfish, and the tiny snails appear to be perfectly preserved
specimens. But then you notice a Macintosh computer plug emerging from the roots
of a foxglove, and that the pattern on the wings of a butterfly is an exact
replica of Louis Vuitton luggage. "I want people to stand an inch away and say, '
Wait a minute, is that real or not?'," Burkhardt says. "I like that blurred
line." Burkhardt (Diploma '03,
Fifth Year Certificate '04), who lives in Miami, creates his hybrid flora and fauna out of
polymer clay, spray foam, and paint. "I'm trying to make something realistic and
organic out of totally synthetic materials," he says. In Burkhardt's fake
natural world, like the real natural world, "everything is connected," he says.
Take the Foxglove Polar Petroabsorba,
a.k.a. the Arctic Oil Plum, for example. Burkhardt thinks about "how that plant
adapts when motor oil comes ashore, and what could happen when a wasp lands on
that plant, and then what could happen when that wasp stings you." Before Burkhardt began
making his own plants, he grew real ones, farming organic vegetables on eastern
Long
Island and selling
sunflowers for $5 a bunch in farmers' markets. "A farm is exactly like the art
world," Burkhardt says. "You've got a greenhouse, you heat it, you plant seeds.
Some of them take, some don't, some will produce fruit, some won't. There’s a
lot of preparation before you're ready to be out there with your work. That's
just what happens in a studio." Until six months ago,
Burkhardt made his home in Boston, where he took on the role of arts booster as
well as artist. He and photographer Tanit Sakakini conceived The Superheroes Project, a splashy public
relations event in which a group of Boston artists dressed as Aquaman and Supergirl, among
others, to help invigorate Boston's reputation as an art town. Burkhardt also
created "Word of Mouth," an open, unjuried exhibit of small works by emerging
artists that was first shown at the Rhys Gallery in Boston and was recreated for the Art Basel Miami Beach
festival last year. "If you want to be an artist I really believe it's important
to be out there," Burkhardt says. "The more success I experience, the more I
feel I need to share it with other people."
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