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Kurt Steger: Outdoor Sculptures

August 21 - November 17, 2024

Fulcrum V, Wood, charred wood, concrete, steel, and wire sculpture by Kurt Steger

Fulcrum V (Red Line) (2022)
Wood, charred wood, concrete, steel, wire

Kurt Steger

Japanese Stroll Garden

Kurt Steger:
Outdoor Sculptures
 

Kurt Steger has been a carpenter, woodworker, and sculptor for over four decades. He brings a high level of craftsmanship, design, and ingenuity to his creations, which in turn express his concern for the environment and humanity. His work has many influences, from Shamanism to Buddhism to Western psychology. Steger’s accomplishments include an installation in Sacramento City Hall in Sacramento, CA, a traffic circle sculpture in Grass Valley, CA, and an interactive sculpture and healing ceremony conducted at the Smithsonian Museum of American Art in Washington D.C., honoring the ten-year anniversary of 9/11. Steger's work is in private, public, and museum collections, and in 2017 he received a NYFA Sculpture Grant. He teaches woodworking and recently started a woodworking program for children and adults in which he emphasizes the importance of working with one’s hands as a way of building positive character traits. His current and most ambitious sculptural project is the creation of his home sculpture garden, including a studio that he designed and built. Steger has lived in the Lower Hudson Valley since 2017.

ARTIST STATEMENT

​"I am interested in the natural world and its connection with the human psyche. My sculptures are constructed primarily of wood, and I work with such materials as paper, twine, concrete, and steel. I often incorporate impermanent elements – ice, fire, erosion, gravity – which leave their mark and allude to the passage of time. The stains left by the fugitive materials refer to the destruction of nature and the devastating imprint that humans have imposed on the environment. I was trained as a carpenter and woodworker and value the beauty of craftsmanship, as well as the importance of ritual. Working by hand, I combine knowledge and intuition, bridging the gap between mind and heart. My work addresses our need to reconnect with nature to heal the primal wounds of the human psyche. Beyond the physicality of the objects that I create, there are the invisible agents that speak to the heart."

An Artist’s Practice: Roger Baumann, Ada Pilar Cruz, and Kurt Steger in Conversation

Sunday, November 10, 3pm

Free with museum admission

How do artists learn, evolve, and employ their craft to express that which is in their hearts and minds? Why do they make certain technical choices, such as firing in a wood-fired kiln? What are their many sources of inspiration? How does experience change them and their art? Ceramic artists Roger Baumann and Ada Pilar Cruz, together with woodworker and sculptor Kurt Steger consider the many aspects of their artistic practice.

Accompanying Program: 

Fulcrum II (Quiver) Wood, concrete, steel, and twine sculpture by Kurt Steger

Fulcrum II (Quiver) (2022)
Wood, concrete, steel, twine

Kurt Steger

Pelican, Wood, fiber, and hardware sculpture by Kurt Steger

Pelican (2024)
Wood, fiber, and hardware

Kurt Steger

Pelican, Wood, fiber, and hardware sculpture by Kurt Steger

Pelican (2024)
Wood, fiber, and hardware

Kurt Steger

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PROUD TO BE SUPPORTED BY

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WESTCHESTER COUNTY GOVERNMENT

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