The 2007 Sculpture Selections & the Artists:

SCULPTURE DIRECTORY
 VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE SCULPTURE
#31.
"Family if Man IV" Ms. Cynthia McKean
Saugatuck, MI
Gift to the City of Saugatuck
Art ‘Round Town

ARTIST INFO:

Cynthia McKean

This sculpture represents mankind; the fact that we do emerge from the Mother of ALL,
Earth; and when our Lives are finished we return to Her. The whole creation is cut from a
single piece of steel plate representing Earth. Each human form moves away from Earth. All of the forms intermingle, an outer curve of one becoming an inner curve of another and all such that they can recombine and fall back into place once again forming the original plate. The larger figures in the back represent maturity, wisdom, and experience. Youth is represented by the smallest figure, which is cut from the inner thighs of a larger figure. This small figure is pushed forward. It is moving toward the future unaware that those in the background are looking out protectively and helping it along the way.

In the same plane as the background is yet another emerging form not yet defined but also cut from the negative space of a larger form. It represents life in its embryonic state preparing to launch. Interestingly some people have interpreted this form as a tombstone denoting a figure returning to its place of origin. If it actually represents both it becomes the key component of the piece illustrating the cyclical nature of our existence tying us from the present to both the future and the past.

The sculpture is called Family of Man IV simply because there are four figures in this
presentation. It is part of a larger series called The Family of Man.




I grew up in the West, Montana and Wyoming. The West is where there are so few people that everyone counts. There is no crowd to get lost in. It is also where one is inclined to be more in tune with ones own natural environment because one is closer to it. One spends time in it. Montana is called "Big Sky Country". I didn't know what that meant until I moved away. The horizon there is chiseled out against the sky. Lines are sharp. Space is forever. Colors are strong. I believe that all of this influences my art.

The discovery of DNA happened as I was completing a major in biology at Whitman College in Walla Walla Washington. Since my interest was in natural history, I was already obsolete. That was 1963. Still interested in the environment I went back to the school of architecture at the University of Idaho in the 1970's. I felt that people had lost sight of how the natural and built environments may interact in a positive way. I graduated again in 1980. Unable for financial reasons to complete the internship required for aspiring architects, I joined industry for the next fifteen plus years.

Working for a factory proved to be a whole new experience. There aren't any factories in all of those wide open spaces of my youth. As fate would have it the factory into which I was pouring my life had this wonderful, special place called "the weld shop". At last in the early 1990's I had no choice but to go to the local vo-tech center and start welding. And that's what I've been doing ever since. In June of 1997, I left W. H. Porter, Inc. to do art full time.

Abstract - Square Plates & Tubes -
The work is purely abstract. It is a study in positive space using squares.

Abstract - Open Squares -

The work is purely abstract. It is a study in the interaction of positive and negative space using open squares. Typically I do not name my abstract work. Viewers often see something very different than what I had in mind when I made it. I don't want to bias their reception or the pleasure they may derive by figuring out for themselves what they think it represents. For example the first piece I had in the Rose Garden was a series of circles attached to three vertical spikes. Most people saw it as "bubbles" or "something" sailing upward. However, some saw it as a "wild mountain stream" or "something" rushing downward. If I had determined by giving it a title what I wanted observers to see that wonderful freedom to interact with the piece would have evaporated.



2006 ADDENDUM:

I make art because I have to. Thoughts evolve as I dream of the natural and built
environments and how they might enhance each other. Sometimes the results lean toward Mother Nature and sometimes they are meant to complement Her. Many ideas frolic without particular meaning but a few are very serious.

I think in terms of cutting through space, blocking space, and what the results will be.
Sometimes I see the object, sometimes it’s the space around the object but usually a
combination of the two.

I like bright colors. Steel is a marvelous medium. Strong and pliable, it speaks to me. If I work it, respect it, and treat it gently, it will reward me by telling my story to others as well. If people walk around, rub, and climb all over my work I consider it a success. It means that they have connected with it. It is talking to them. I abhor the thought of public art that you are not supposed to touch.

REGARDING THE "FAMILY OF MAN IV" sculpture now on permanent display:

"This sculpture represents mankind; the fact that we do emerge from the Mother of ALL,
Earth; and when our Lives are finished we return to Her. The whole creation is cut from a
single piece of steel plate representing Earth. Each human form moves away from Earth. All of the forms intermingle, an outer curve of one becoming an inner curve of another and all such that they can recombine and fall back into place once again forming the original plate.

The larger figures in the back represent maturity, wisdom, and experience. Youth is
represented by the smallest figure, which is cut from the inner thighs of a larger figure. This small figure is pushed forward. It is moving toward the future unaware that those in the background are looking out protectively and helping it along the way.

In the same plane as the background is yet another emerging form not yet defined but also cut from the negative space of a larger form. It represents life in its embryonic state preparing to launch. Interestingly some people have interpreted this form as a tombstone denoting a figure returning to its place of origin. If it actually represents both it becomes the key component of the piece illustrating the cyclical nature of our existence tying us from the present to both the future and the past.

The sculpture is called Family of Man IV simply because there are four figures in this
presentation. It is part of a larger series called The Family of Man.


SCULPTURE DIRECTORY
 VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE SCULPTURE