5.25.12 — Weaving Minimalism
Remember Minimalism’s hard, industrial edge? For fifty-five years, Sheila Hicks has dedicated herself to one thing, with work of such clarity that one can take it in at a glance. After that, though, things grow complicated, and the more one tries to describe it, the more one has to qualify and to explain. Start with that one thing, weaving. She weaves everything, from materials as simple as linen and as natural as corn husks. They just may not cover anything. 
They may not be able to cover anything, in loose threads barely sufficient to hold other bits together. They may look like an uncovering, like a head of hair—or the thick nap of a comforter without anything to hold it together or to hold it in. They may wind together into something tough and harsh, or that dark hair may consist of something as hard as steel filaments amid lighter linen and cotton. Menhir, completed in 2004, almost sounds like “my hair,” even while meaning ancient monuments from the Atlantic coast to either side of the Channel. Hard, soft, or both at once, one can practically feel it.
She studied at Yale with George Kubler, a scholar of pre-Columbian art and art after the Spanish conquest. She is in the design collection of the Cooper-Hewitt and Musée des Arts Décoratifs, in Paris. If she has one constant, though, it is tapestry way too small for blankets even for a child. It may come as a surprise to find one such from 1958, at Sikkema Jenkins through May 25. A 2011 retrospective came no closer than the Institute of Contemporary Art, in Philadelphia, even though “women’s work” is hot again—but this touches most of those years, with no obvious arc or development. And it is clearly art, except when it is not.
The Met counted her in 2006 among the American Studio Craft Movement, but she has lived since 1964 in Paris. The coarse rope of Overflow from that year spills to the floor from an even coarser washtub, as in a postwar cold-water flat. An old-fashioned key with fat, colorful rubber bands hanging down could allow entrance. She intended her most clearly decorative art, a bas relief as the bottom half of an oval, for an Air France Boeing 747. Then again, Frank Stella was busy at his Protractors in 1969, too. Not that he would have assembled one from rectangles of varying sizes in no particular order.
She also studied with Josef Albers, known for his Homage to the Square, although one can forget that he had taught design at the Bauhaus. Still, Hicks is not making pure painting or pure anything else. Even her 1973 Masonry, a precise grid of squares, uses its diagonal weave to break sharply with the picture plane. It matters that a 1978 white column extends to the ceiling just inches from an actual gallery column of more or less the same dimensions. It matters, too, though that hers never quite touches the ground, as if floating, and that she assembles it from cotton bands with strings at each corner—maybe diapers or hospital supplies.
She accepts imagery, architecture, and geometry, like the bathtub or column, so long as she can flirt with them all. Her 1974 wool Tapis de Prière (or “prayer rug”) looks like the silhouette of a minaret. She uses both natural and found materials, while making it hard to tell them apart. The rope in the bathtub is seagrass, and what look like black shells caught up in thread are slate. Hicks makes art about design and craft, as if weaving Minimalism, but works often as not have loose craft and banal design. Somehow, the materials are enough.




