Feature Article “Public Art Review” – Winter 2016

TRANSFORMING SPACES

Catherine Widgery’s installations
use subtle motions of light, wind,
and water to awaken the urban
landscape—and those who inhabit it

BY MICHAEL BLANDING

Public Art Review Fall/Winter 2016

CATHERINE WIDGERY’S EPIPHANY AS AN ARTIST came just over
a decade ago with a sculpture she created for the opening of the
Provincetown Art Association and Museum on Cape Cod. Stringing
together rusted chains, fishing gear, shells, and other debris, she
created a whirlwind of junk in the center of the gallery—and after
the exhibit, she threw it all away. “It was a pivotal moment,” she says
now, “where I felt that all these things were going to disappear, and I
could let them go.” From that moment, Widgery started working in a
different way—concentrating not so much on the objects she creates,
but on the way they change the experience of the environment
around them. It’s a sensibility she extends to the public art installations
she’s created since then, which rely on subtle movements of
light, wind, and water to transform physical spaces in such a way
that the art itself almost disappears.

“I want the viewers who are exposed to my work to come alive
to their surroundings,” she says. In a project called Sky Veil, which
she completed in 2015 for the county juvenile courthouse in Ogden,
Utah, she created reflective dichroic glass panels interspersed with
large glass windows facing snow-capped mountains—so viewers see
mountains in front of them and behind them at the same time. “I
thought of how I could bring the landscape inside,” she says. “By
fragmenting it and breaking it up, I give the mind a puzzle, so [viewers]
see the outside in a way they didn’t see it before.”
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