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Excerpt:
...Isaiah Zagar is rubbing furiously at the grout. Since
5:30 this steamy summer morning he has been up to his
elbows in pasty crimson grout: mixing and pouring, applying,
scraping, chipping, making walls ring with a staccato
sandpaper sounding ‘chuusch… chuusch… chuusch’ as he
smooths cement around Oaxacan pottery fragments, gleaming
bits of mirror, luminous glass bottles, overfired, out
of shape tile seconds (‘But look how magical they are!’),
as well as a smorgasbord of ceramic creations produced
by the legion of Indian, Peruvian, Ecuadorian and Mexican
artisans he calls friends. Tiles, shards, and mirrors
weave and spiral through the sea of coloured grout in
patterns that seem the sculptural equivalent of a whirling
dervish’s dance.
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‘The 20th century is stuck on this idea of form!’ Zagar
bellows, reflecting on the artistic straightjacket he
has escaped. ‘But to be stuck in that thing called form
is to be living in the death mask. Form doesn’t happen
but at the bequest of ENERGY!’
Zagar knows energy. This entryway wall, a huge expenditure
for most, is but another pebble in the sand for him.
Today he chips away at a hallway on South Street; next
week he will attack the stairwell; next month the exterior;
until finally this tireless mason/artist has covered
one more three-story brick building/canvas – inside
and out – transforming it into an extraordinary ceramic
and glass environment.
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