Lygia Clark
30 1/2 x 19 1/8 x 14 3/4 in
(dimensions variable)
We see the organic nature of Bicho, in keeping with the ideas of Neo-Concretism, not only in its exoskeletal form and transformative nature, but also in its name. Whereas traditional sculpture hides its structural support, Clark instead focuses on it, by drawing attention to the hinges that bind the work together, and to the empty spaces created in between these folded spaces.
Clark made these sculptures to be participatory, and therefore variable. She challenged not only the idea that sculpture is fixed, but also that there is only one way to view or experience it. The sculptures are fundamentally unstable — both literally and metaphorically. They have no front or back, no inside or outside, no left or right. In this way, they have no author, since each participant creates a different experience of Bicho. Differing from performance art, however, these sculptures do not create spectacle but rather invite participation. The work of art is not the viewing of the sculpture itself, but one’s participation with it.
Clark arrived at Bicho through her exploration of the “organic line,” and its mutability in two and three-dimensional form. However, it was Ferreira Gullar, primary author of the “Neo-Concrete Manifesto” who called Bicho neither painting nor sculpture. Instead, Gullar described the work as a non-object (an early term for abstraction), one that did not have a function and that resisted categorization.