2008
Stone
16 x 18 x 14 in. (40.6 x 45.7 x 35.6 cm)
Collection of the Akron Art Museum
Gift of Krzys Stanczak
2024.2.2
© Barbara Stanczak
For Barbara Stanczak, wood and stone are more than materials. They are partners in the creative process and guides toward new understanding. She explains that these substances are constantly “teasing, tempting and provoking me to see more, to see beyond, to see the micro and the macro of the universe.” Stanczak finds these universal qualities not in immediately recognizable forms like wooden branches and stone boulders, but rather in dense rings and layers, subtle features formed over decades or even thousands of years. As she exercises her artistic impulses, Stanczak aligns herself with these natural processes. As the artist and the materials harmonize, it is as if two forms of intelligence are working together—as if spirit and matter are not so separate as one might expect. Stanczak committed to working with wood and stone only after a long process of discovery. Born in Germany in 1941, she came to the United States in 1960 to assist her grandfather in painting church frescoes, and she later worked in handmade paper, metal, and a variety of other media. She has also used photography to sharpen her awareness of the natural world, and examples of this work appear here, in company with her sculpture. Additionally, she worked alongside her husband, Julian Stanczak, whose paintings and prints have also been celebrated in the Isroff Gallery as well with a one-artist show in 2013. As her own career evolved throughout her 37-year tenure as a professor at the Cleveland Institute of Art, Barbara carved her first wooden sculpture in 1992. She recalls: “I was tired of searching; it was time to arrive!” About Proud to Compare, Stanczak has stated: “Occhio de Tegris is a stone from Sicili’s underwater caves. The polished surfaces are rich in detail with the turbulent geological history of the land. Round edges search for straight edges as confirmation of their own characteristics; rich darkness delights in finding light edges; mass compares with emptiness.”