Smokey Saxaphone , 2015
30 x 20 in (h x w)
Fumage on panel Courtesy of Adelson Galleries

Steven Spazuk (b. Canada, 1960) depicts the fluttering of small birds around a series of smoky instruments, employing his signature use of fire in a process called fumage. His exceptional mastery of the technique of sculpting traces of smoke and soot into distinctive compositions makes his work instantly recognizable. Spazuk’s creations carry a feeling of airy lightness. The tiny avian creatures seem about to alight on the smoldering instruments. Fluttering feathers, the wafting smoke, and the suggestion of notes on the breeze, all combine to create a distinctly ephemeral quality. Spazuk’s panels are akin to looking skyward to search the clouds for shapes and patterns. They seem to threaten to dissolve and re-shape themselves at any moment. The smoky saxophone, cymbal, and bass guitar all seem to be a visual play on the rhythmic beat of “hot” music. As the artist says, “Fire to me is so inspiring. Fire consumes, warms, and illuminates, but can also bring pain and death; thus, its symbolic meaning varies wildly, depending upon the context of its use. I mostly use it to talk about life’s fragility. . . . The soot deposit on paper is extremely fragile, it can easily be altered by any contact. Anything that brushes or touches the soot will leave its trace … That medium is now part of me.”

Plus de Lehman College Art Gallery

I WRITE THE SONGS , 2009
45 x 55 in (h x w)
Video Courtesy of the artist Photography: Peter Sterling
Lehman College Art Gallery
When Can We Start Playing , 2012
24 x 36 in (h x w)
Please note: Image dimensions have been modified for online presentation. Actual dimensions are 15 x 15 inches. Cut Paper Private Collection, Courtesy of Forum Gallery, New York, NY. © Cybèle Young;
Lehman College Art Gallery
A Change Is Gonna Come (Oh Yes It Will), , 2018
71 x 68 in (h x w)
Tambourines, metallic leather, suede, reflective plexiglas, grosgrain ribbon, lampwork glass Courtesy of Rena Bransten Gallery, San Francisco, © Lava Thomas
Lehman College Art Gallery
Tambourine , 2016
32 x 24 in (h x w)
Denisyuk Hologram on Glass Courtesy of Johannes Vogt Gallery
Lehman College Art Gallery
Bakelite Robot , 2002
48 x 50 in (h x w)
Single Channel Video (color-silent) with LCD monitors and vintage Bakelite radios Courtesy of Gagosian © Nam June Paik Estate
Lehman College Art Gallery