NEW YORK, NY.- Public Art Fund unveils Fred Eversleys mesmerizing 12-foot tall sculpture at the Doris C. Freedman Plaza in Central Park. Eversleys powerful new magenta-tinted cast polyurethane work, titled Parabolic Light, offers visitors a captivating experience of perceiving the surrounding environment, others, and themselves through the artists lens. Simultaneously reflective and transparent, the luminescent parabolic forma tapered cylinderserves as a focal point of serenity, transcendence, and exploration of new dimensions and perspectives. The exhibition reflects Public Art Fund's ongoing commitment to creating public exhibition opportunities for advanced career artists and artists of color, particularly those who may not have received widespread recognition earlier in their careers. Eversleys presentation represents not only his first public sculpture in New York, but also the first outdoor placement of the artists large-scale polyurethane resin works.
Fred Eversleys art immerses us in perceptual experiences that bring us outside of ourselves. He explores how an artwork may inhabit the world around it while simultaneously inviting us into the realms of imagination and mystery, said Public Art Fund Artistic & Executive Director Nicholas Baume. Parabolic Light, Eversleys first public work in his home city, takes his series of pristine cylindrical sculptures to a new scale and context, engaging with the ever-changing outdoor environment, the effects of natural light, and the countless visitors whose attention it captures.
New York-based artist Fred Eversley is a pioneer of the West Coast Light and Space and Finish Fetish movements. With his scientific background as an electrical and aerospace engineer informing his artistic practice for over fifty years, Eversley is renowned for his vivid cast resin works that invite audience-artwork interaction through a range of sensory phenomena.
Dedicated to expressing ideas about energy as a physical and metaphysical concern for all of humanity, Eversleys sculptures center on the parabola, the only shape that concentrates all forms of energylight, sound, and heatinto a single acoustic and optical focal point.
My parabolic forms are all about energy. They are made to reflect all the infinite combinations of internal reflections, refractions, color changes, and other optical phenomena that one can experience within a single sculpture, said artist Fred Eversley. Parabolic Light and its display in Doris C. Freedman Plaza resonates with my vision of an energetic outdoor focal point to attract public audiences to spontaneously pause, slow down, and engage in numerous ways with a cosmic, mystifying object.
Eversleys presentation with Public Art Fund marks an ambitious continuation of his new Cylindrical Lens works, the artists first series of larger-than-human-scale, free-standing, floor-based sculptures. These recent workswhich debuted at David Kordansky Gallery in May 2023are conceptually linked to the cylindrical section sculptures the artist first exhibited in his first solo presentation at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1970. The largest work of the series thus far, Parabolic Light, is shaped as a plano-convex lens that focuses light into a single line. It acts as an optical instrument where stillness and motion appear to be present at the same time. Its geometrical mass gradually transitions its magenta hue, from rich saturation at its bottom to colorless transparency at the apex. The color saturation further shifts depending on the angle of the viewer and the direction of the sun. The sculpture obtains its luminous tone and
reflective quality from its crystal-clear resin material and through a labor-intensive
hand-polishing process. Parabolic Light appears simultaneously reflective and transparent, liquid and solida manmade form with an otherworldly, ethereal quality.
Parabolic Light prompts questions about how optical and physical perceptions determine how we connect with each other and the world, communicating a kinetic, palpable sense of the mysterious presence of energy throughout the universe. The sculptures properties, and direct placement on the ground, entice viewers to approach and move around the work. Bending, distorting, and reflecting faces, forms, and colors, the work heightens the relationship between the viewers body and the cylindrical lens. This key performative facet is on full display in this outdoor work. Interacting with natural light and spontaneous passers-by, it represents Eversleys most far-reaching and dynamic foray into the cultivation of audience-artwork interaction to date. The work's outdoor site allows for natural light to hit its surface and further generate a range of refractions and prismatic effects, connecting the viewers senses with the object and the environment in spellbinding ways. In this way, the sculpture expands and destabilizes multiple states of existence and perception. Straddling the scientific, metaphysical, and mystical, the sculpture functions as a portal for viewers to a world of radiant color, abstracted form, and a re-examination of ones self and others within our surroundings.
Fred Eversley: Parabolic Light is curated by Public Art Fund Artistic & Executive Director Nicholas Baume with support from Assistant Curator Jenée-Daria Strand and initial development by former Public Art Fund Senior Curator Allison Glenn.
Fred Eversley (b. 1941, Brooklyn, New York) is a key figure in the development of contemporary art from Los Angeles during the postwar period. He synthesizes elements from several art historical movements associated with Southern California, including Light and Space, though his work is the product of a pioneering vision all his own, informed by lifelong studies on the timeless principles of light, space, time, and gravity. Prior to becoming an artist, Eversley moved to California to become an engineer, collaborating with NASA and major aerospace companies to develop high-energy acoustic and vibration testing laboratories. Eversleys work on NASAs second and third human spaceflight programs, Gemini and Apollo, developed his interest in the parabola, which began when he was a teen. His pioneering use of plastic, polyester resin, and industrial dyes and pigments reflects the technological advances that define the postwar period even as his work reveals the timeless inner workings of the human eye and mind.
Eversley will unveil his largest Public Commission to date, a sculptural installation, titled Portals, for permanent display in Ables Park, at One Flagler, West Palm Beach in early summer of 2024, commissioned by Related Companies in partnership with the City of West Palm Beach.