An abstract bridge
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Young Chang
People find refuge in artist Howard Ben Tre’s art -- from his smaller
sculptures, which look comfortable in air-conditioned museum spaces, to
his open-air public works projects.
His BankBoston Plaza in Providence, Rhode Island provides artistic
relief with its wavelike seating area and centerpiece sculpture that
spouts water, and provides a seat for people looking to rest from a
bustling day in a bustling city.
It is important to Ben Tre, internationally recognized for his use of
cast glass in sculpture, that his art not only brings people together,
but also bridges them with their surroundings.
The Brooklyn native, whose exhibit will show at the Orange County
Museum of Art in Newport Beach through May 6, wants his audience to find
their own path to his work.
“I think that sometimes museums and people involved in the arts field
underestimate the intelligence of the average person, whatever average
means,” Ben Tre, 51, said. “My approach is to put the work out there --
create this installation where there’s this relationship between the
different pieces... but I don’t want to spoon-feed people answers.”
He has included very few labels and signs at his Newport Beach show --
an overview from the mid-1980s to the present -- which includes 30
sculptures, 11 sketches and photos of his public works projects.
“That’s because I don’t want people to come in and start to read,” he
said. “I want people to come in and look at the work. I try to have a lot
of references in my work so people can come to it and see it in a
different way, depending on the level of interest they have.”
His style is abstract -- with pieces resembling vessels, tools, the
human body, etc. -- but he tries to create different images for different
viewers to grab onto.
The accessibility of Ben Tre’s work stems partly from his upbringing.
His father was a carpenter who gave up his dreams of being an artist to
earn a living. Ben Tre’s early jobs were held in factories and machine
shops, where he learned and grew to respect industrial aesthetics.
That touch is found in his works today. Ben Tre’s sculptures often
combine cast glass with other materials, like granite or bronze. The
granite sometimes envelopes green-tinted glass, which is deliberately
imperfect with its bubbles and scratches. He broke from traditional
methods of glass blowing early in his career and improvised as he saw fit
-- sand casting and fusing copper with molten glass, for example.
Part of Ben Tre’s affinity toward glass comes from its resemblance to
water. The Rhode Island School of Design graduate grew up on the beach.
It’s where he walked and thought during his formative high school years
and where he worked his summer jobs. He lives near the beach in Rhode
Island today.
“I could not imagine not living near the ocean -- I couldn’t imagine
living in the Midwest,” he said. “I see how it affects people.”
Water can be used in a calming way, a soothing way or energetically,
he added. Its color, its sound -- these are elements that can change an
environment.
This is why recently, during a meeting with officials from Bank of
America, he tried to convince them that water would be a nice element to
include in a new plaza he is creating for the company.
Art critics have said his public pieces show a somewhat idealized
concept of society. Naomi Vine, director of the museum, said this concept
may involve an ideal world where people are not isolated from each other.
“In which human interactions are harmonious and in tune with nature as
well as with technology,” she said.
Brian Langston, spokesperson at the museum, agreed.
“I know that Howard’s personal philosophy is one that’s based very
much on cooperation and egalitarianism and genuine sharing,” he said.
Langston referred to Ben Tre’s plaza in Boston.
“It’s much frequented and loved by the locals,” he said. “I have
friends who live in Boston, and they think it’s a wonderful place. In a
city that’s full of wonderful places, that’s kind of nice.”
Ben Tre said he feels fortunate people appreciate his work.
“I feel as if I have the best job in the world -- I get to make what I
want and I’m lucky enough that people appreciate it,” he said. “I think
[my father] would be amazed if he were alive.”
FYI
WHAT: Howard Ben Tre: Interior/Exterior
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday through May 6
WHERE: Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
COST: $5 for adults, $4 for seniors and students, free for children
under 16 and museum members.
CALL: (949) 759-1122.
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