Enter
David Luck's studio and you immediately confront his fascination
with metalworking. Every available inch is packed with work
spaces, older yet well- maintained tools, scraps of sheet
metal, shipping crates, files, books. In a studio that could
easily enter a state of chaos, David's is ordered, layered.
Like the modular quality of his work, a series of small intensely
used spaces is ordered into onb entity known as the Metalworks
in Iowa City, Iowa. With an undergraduate degree in photojournalism,
it was graduate work in metals with Chunghi Choo at the University
of Iowa that brought David closer to his present sculptural
involvement with metal. "As I designed and made functional
metal objects, I became interested in the expressive qualities
of the metalworking craft. Metal is part of our visual culture
and seems to express a certain subject matter and content
by itself."
The
mainstay of David's work is his jewelry: handmade link bracelets,
pendants, bangles and earrings for the most part, in sterling
silver. However, he also makes sculptural pieces and metal
wall quilts. When working in sculptural forms, David's preference
is for sheet metal and casting. In investigating these techniques,
he explored structural systems used to fabricate metal items
in everyday life. Ductwork is an example of this. As he describes, "I adapted structural systems to make forms on a larger scale.
The patterns of the structural components and joints broke
up the surface of my forms, becoming part of the decorative
system. This led to the use of hammered surface patterns and
relief. I composed these rhythmic patterns, trying to make
compositions with internal harmony."
Some
of David's pieces employ colored surface patinas, which he
achieves chemically in the studio. In addition to jewelry,
David Luck has executed commissions of large hammered metal
wall quilts for public buildings such as Iowa State University's
Horticulture Building and Carver-Hawkeye Arena at the University
of Iowa.
Details:
Sterling silver jewelry: $65-200. Vessels and sculpture $350-7000