Synergy - by David Barr
Marble, Steel, Plant Material - 1999, Novi, Michigan
David Barr feels that art transcends and connects people, instead of dividing
them. Understanding that art and culture are inextricably tied together
and always have been, Barr poetically manifests this relationship in his
art. Such evidence is found in this sculpture, Synergy, where Barr has
created an environment woven of three elements; stone, steel and plant
material. The artist explains, the sculpture expresses the drama of natural
and human design collisions and resolutions. A logarithmic stone spiral
path (one of nature's most basic and harmonious form), aligned by roughly
cut quarry stone boulders (polished on one side), is intersected by painted
steel plates. This sculpture is governed by mathematical principles or
arithmetic progressions, and is synergistically aligned with solar and
lunar rotations. Man confronts nature, challenging but not disturbing its
balance. Synergy is a space to wander through and explore altering spatial
relationships. 
His sculptures covertly bear witness to his travels. The egg-shaped stone
from the Easter Island shore became an inspiration of his marble sculptures.
On the issue of color, he realized that the exclusion of color, for its
entire programmatic rigor, was restrictive, arbitrary, and impoverishing.
Most fundamentally, a rejection of the full spectrum is a negation of nature
and life itself.
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