/ 20 March 1998

A provocative domain

Tracy MurinikOn show in Cape Town

Like a leaf skeleton, or a scrutinised microdot, or a highly convoluted mapping of space, Paul Edmunds’s assemblages inveigle themselves along the foundations of the Mark Coetzee Fine Art Cabinet in an installation entitled Once, Again.

Hundreds of small plastic cable ties and bottle tops, all meticulously joined and pinned, make up this latticed maze; all of its components found materials from the streets of Cape Town. This is a painstaking and largely obsessive project. And yet, the r esult is a profoundly serene, contemplative space.

Edmunds describes a concern with ”process” in his work, referring at once to the process by which the work is made, and to a recognition of ”natural processes” of which both he and the materials that he manipulates are a part. The cyclical origins of the plastic he uses – in which one is able to plot an evolution of minerals and plant materials to the fossil fuels which make up the plastic, for ex

ample – reflect the idea that all materials are in a constant state of change.

The recycled components which make up the work, including the hardboards on which they meander in relief, form a further stage of that evolution. But in choosing to utilise these seemingly useless found bits, Edmunds exposes a ”careless consumerism” whic h sees materials ”only on the level of the immediate and objective, only at the level of their ‘usefulness’ and for the duration of their existenc e as such things”. He allots recognition and attention, and in so doing, gives value to all things as being part of these universal, natural cycles.

The visual forms which this work takes on, echo this potential. The patterns and rhythms happen gradually in quiet movements. They grow in accumulated effect evoking both an awareness of sameness, and a scrutinised recognition of variation. One becomes a ware of the need to ”find” recognisable images in the maze, barely conscious attempts to find appeasing confirmation of oneself in the ”system”.

But one is lulled into other insights, too, in this silently provocative domain. Time as a concept, has many resonances here. It seems impossible to miss the scrupulous committedness to physical and creative processes carried out in this work, where each pin stands as a marker of the time consumed in making. Invariably, this investment of time seems to be largely negated by the temporary nature of

installation.

This recognition is made even more acute by the artist’s desire to consciously re-use the materials of this work as the means of other future works. The message is unsentimental, but also largely comforting in the way it describes a universal system of p rocesses which are all-encompassing.

Once, Again by Paul Edmunds is on show at the Mark Coetzee Fine Art Cabinet in Cape Town until March 28