
Sonoma County Independent July 10-16
1997
Elements of Style By Gretchen Giles
KURT STEGER'S STUDIO is located in
what seems curiously to be the fish-packing district of Santa
Rosa. The intrigue of discovering such a cityscape, land
locked far away from any seagoing docks, almost distracts from
such mundaneness as address. But a totem standing in Steger's
evolving Zen rock garden is
sufficient to catch the eye. Knowing that Steger was a friend
of the late and much-beloved assemblage artist Raymond Barnhart,
one assumes that this must be the
place, and that work must have been Barnhart's.
One is always liable to make mistakes. For while this is the place,
the totem isn't Barnhart's. It's Stegers, a piece that reflects-along
with a few others the power of
the master artist's mentorship.
An emerging artist with three years of single-minded devotion
under his belt, Steger is being given the rare opportunity to
mount a one-man show of his wood,
rock, grass, and mud sculptural objects at the Cultural Arts Council's
SoFo 2 Gallery.
In CAC staffer Barbara Thoulion's memory, only two other artists-the
venerable painter Horst Trave and well-regarded en-plein-are painter
Jack Stuppin-have had
such an honor. Titling the show "The Walking Stick Project,"
Steger is deepening that trust, dedicating the exhibit to Barnhart's
memory.
"I wanted to do a show for Raymond," Steger says simply
standing inside the organized garage that serves as his studio.
"He was such an inspiration to me."
Pointing to an elegant, found-object mingling of elements assembled
into a piece hanging on the wall outside his studio, Steger explains
that he had been fooling
with the componates of this assemblage peice the day of the 93-year
old Barnhart;s death in a freak auto accident last year, but had
decided not to build it because
of it's resemblance to his friends work. When the sad news reached
him, he changed his mind. "This is going to be just the way
that it is," he remembers. Then he
named the work "Raymond."
Trained as a maker of cabinets and other furniture, Steger has
respect for the elements of wood and of traditional style. He
dose little assemblage now focusing
instead on a progression of structures that begin with what he
calls "Altars to the Earth," built along plumb lines,
featuring the juxtaposition of rocks suspended in
a exploration of space the clean lines of wood. He then moved
to what he terms"ritual" pieces, wooden structures that
have been carefully burned, retaining both the
markings of the fire and the intent of the artist to imbue the
work with meaning and metaphor. And now he is making- well, he's
not quite certain what he's making.
"Now I am going to a place that
I'm not sure of," he admits, beginning to draw from there
ceiling storage the large, wooden staffs he has fashioned for
his
one-man exhibit. "There's something really wonderful about
these," he says, stroking the smooth wood. Taller than most
humans, the staffs have plate-sized
"heads," and the easy carriage of Massai warriors.
"They have a real primitive sense to them," he says.
Pointing across the studio to darkened stairwell in which hangs
one unfinished stick, her wood unsanded,
white, and raw- her head unrealized-he says, "they're all
in pairs except for this one. But she's standing her own ground.
She seems to be watching over everything;
she's a very powerful force in the shop."
Having begun "her" as a mate to another stick, Steger
found himself unable to finish. Will he ever?
"I think I will he chuckles. "I've got a fish that goes
on her head, and she's allot easier to deal with when she's got
the fish. My relationship to her is very strange.
It took a lot effort to get this far. That one over there was
supposed to be her husband," he points."But he just
couldn't complete."
Having lived a professional life as a journeyman craftsman, Steger
is now coming to terms with the artistic life. "My first
pieces, the altar pieces, were really
figured out- it's the nature of the pieces, to cut all the pieces
of wood," he says, hoisting a walking stick back up to its
aerie. "And that's changing. I'm getting to the
point where I can just make an element and let it sit and become
something else."
"The Walking Stick Project"
shows though August with a reception Friday, July 22, from 5:30
to 8 p.m. Steger gives a gallery talk on Wednesday, July 16, at
7p.m. SoFo2 Gallery, 602 Wilson St., Santa Rosa. Admission is
free. 579-ARTS.