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John
Clague
Sculptor
1928–2004
I
have always been fascinated by nature, John Clague once told
a reporter, and the possibility of creating something as astonishing
as the very first turtle I ever saw. The celebrated Cleveland
sculptor was referring to the basketball-size spheres he began making
in the early 1990s that were cut open to reveal mysterious structures
of gleaming polished steel-recalling those strange rocks known as
geodes whose interiors are hung with glittering crystals.
But he might have been describing all of his work done before and
after receiving the Cleveland Arts Prize in 1967.
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fact, Clague is better known for his monumental sculptures:
bold, often airy abstract forms in bronze, steel, or fiberglass
that organize space and planes into a dynamic architecture.
He typically incorporates the play of light on surfaces that
are sometimes painted black and white, sometimes multicolored,
and sometimes polished to a dazzling finish.These are always
thoughtful constructions that are clearly meant to be walked
around. Frequently the work itself moves, as in the case of
the 20-foot stainless steel kinetic sculpture Auriculum (1973)
that Clague was commissioned to create for Ashland University
south of Cleveland. For Trumbull Memorial Hospital in Warren,
Ohio, he conceived Astra (1988), a 14-foot sculpture
that is suspended in space. |

Astra
1988
Acrylic
on acrylic with stainless skeleton
14' x 14'
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Clague
is also known for his figurative work, which includes a bust of
Great Lakes shipping magnate and philanthropist Samuel Mather (1994)
for the Mather Pavilion of University Hospitals of Cleveland
and the life-size figure of social reformer Edna Jane Hunter (1985)
that welcomes the needy and the disadvantaged to the Edna Jane Hunter
Social Services Building in downtown Cleveland. He subscribes to
the old fashioned idea that an artist should be able to see
what he is looking at, and nothing teaches us that more cruelly
than the portrait. My abstraction has flowed from a deep involvement
with nature and the way nature puts forms together.

Detail
from
Fluidic Migration
1984
Acrylic on acrylic with stainless skeleton
30" x 42" |
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Born
in Cleveland in 1928, Clague studied at the Cleveland Institute
of Art (BFA with honors, 1956) under Edris Eckhardt, Walter
Sinz, Walter Midner, John Bergschneider, Julius Schmidt, and
William McVey. As a fourth-year student he was awarded a Yale/Norfolk
Fellowship and, on graduation, spent an eye-opening year in
Europe as a Catherwood Foundation Traveling Fellow. He taught
sculpture at Oberlin College for four years, then at CIA for
15 years, becoming chairman of the Institute's department of
sculpture, before retiring in 1971 to devote all of his time
to his own work. |
John
Clague's sculptures have been exhibited in the Whitney Annual Exhibition
of Contemporary American Sculpture and in 28 May Shows at the Cleveland
Museum of Art. He is represented in the permanent collections of
the CMA (six sculptures including his 1960 bronze Flower of Erebus
and his 1963 plexiglass Progression in Black and White),
the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art,
the University of Massachusetts, and the Williams College Museum
of Art. His work is documented in the Archives of American Art of
the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and represented
in The Sculpture of the End of the 19th and the 20th Centuries
(Éditions Rencontre, Paris, 1966/67).
text by
Dennis Dooley
1986
Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Fall 2002
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