Find out more on Artsy: Thing's End 皮相筋 In the ongoing series of sculptures Thing's End, James Carl takes rubber bands as a prototype, fixes their transient states by three-dimensional...
In the ongoing series of sculptures Thing's End, James Carl takes rubber bands as a prototype, fixes their transient states by three-dimensional scanning and digital enlargement, and finally completes the production using materials such as silver, copper, aluminum, and stainless steel. Here, James Carl, who is familiar with Chinese culture, engages in wordplay. The word "skin" refers to the appearance of the five senses, which is a unique symbolic characteristic of human beings, and "skin" in Chinese folk culture is also closely related to personal destiny. James Carl anthropomorphizes the rubber band and becomes the maker of the skin. Just as a person's natural appearance changes according to the environment in which he grows up and his personal state of mind, sculpture is often created in a dual context of history and self-awareness. "Thing's End" grows and adapts to the surrounding environment, and with the handmade warmth of the maker and the special character of the region, the "skin" appearance of all beings can be revealed.
James Carl is a cultural traveler who bridges the East and the West. As a product of Western industry, the unique physical properties of rubber bands have a subtle connection with classical Eastern philosophy. Flexible rubber bands can be stretched and twisted into any form but will quickly return to their original shape after losing external forces. Their strong adaptability, "such as yin and yang, such as round and square," corresponds to the Guiguzi's philosophy of living according to the principles of balance and adaptability. The identical state at the beginning and end of its deformation also reflects the Taoist principles of "simultaneity of life and death" and being in harmony with destiny, showcasing broad-mindedness and profound wisdom.
The flexible, easily discarded rubber band has a hard, permanent nature, and James Carl continues the idea of making sculptures of everyday objects out of cardboard, transforming the rubber band from a private object into public property. The endless loop is the urban spirit of sustainable development through sharing in the post-industrial era; the handmade transformation of the rubber bands also symbolizes James Carl's return to the basics in the exploding trend of global trade, with its appeal to the beauty and quality of commodities. The artwork dissolves its strong materiality and becomes the voice of James Carl's ideal utopia.