Eleanor Cepko’s exhibition Containment is a self-described “abstract, contemporary, minimalist take on wunderkammer.” In place of the biological artifacts of natural history, Cepko’s porcelain sculptures transform the intimate A R E A gallery space into her own cabinet of curiosities.
In her work, Cepko imitates textures found in nature through the media of glazed porcelain and stoneware. Walking through Containment, it’s hard to imagine that the rough skin of an elephant, clinging moss, painted copper, or soft leather hide are anything other than the material they present themselves as.
In sharp contrast to the organic textures she employs, Cepko’s rectangular forms lend structure and rationality to her work. By combining stark angularity with organic elements, the formality of line appears to contain the more natural parts of her work. The relationship between the natural and the structural elements in Cepko’s work mirrors that of minimalist artists such as Robert Ryman or the early Korean Dansaekhwa. You can feel the tension between where the artist is deliberate and controlled and when she lets chance take over.
We see Cepko’s aesthetic and structural contrast in in her choice of materials. In Untitled No.2, rectangular slabs of stoneware, marked with irregular creasing and folds are partially submerged in a sensuous inky black lacquer. The lacquer emphasizes the aridity of the stoneware, while the shagreened slabs intensify the richness of the black gloss. The piece reflects the containment of nature to create forced, artificial beauty. Cepko’s sculptures imply that the beauty and spontaneity of the natural world has been tamed by the human hand.