When I asked Libby Pace to do a window installation for the
month of September, I was in a bit of a bind, for reasons
having to do with flaky curators and egotistical artists
(who shall for now and forever more remain nameless). I had
seen a show of hers in June at Urban Glass, which was
stunning, and after my recent bruising curatorial
experiences, I thought that there was no way in hell such
an accomplished artist would agree to do a show at my
brand-new, po-dunk little gallery.
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But I was a friend of a friend of hers, and when I closed
my eyes and thought
“September,â€
I saw the window full of glass. So I sent her an email in the
middle of August, to the effect of
“please please
please,
I’ll do
anything, free massages, mimosas at the opening, do whatever
you want, please say yes.†She
replied,
“I’d
love to.â€
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Then she said she wanted to cover the window with contact
paper. I worried that the lack of light would kill my plants,
but let her go ahead. The preliminary comments, overheard on
the street were,
“Too bad, looks
like
they’re
closed already,†and
“Maybe they went
full-service.†I chewed my
nails; Libby went calmly ahead.
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Now, mind you, I had given her about two
weeks’
notice to do this piece; she already had her hands full with
commissioned glass work for other artists, regular church and
Bible study group, and recently got hired for the
o’dark-thirty
receiving shift at the Park Slope Food Co-op. And nobody was
paying her for this piece.
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So she started in, stencilling an incredibly elaborate
eighteenth-century French wallpaper pattern on the window; she
then cut every detail of the outline with an exacto knife; she
slowly peeled away the pattern in an almost symphonic
complexity of form, frost and negative space; and she
fabricated glass spheres, suspended them with Austrian crystals
that she trolled fifteen thrift stores to find, and filled the
spheres with water.
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This last process was tricky and dangerous; there was more than
one midnight mishap involving glass shards, water, bare feet,
and a shop-vac. This is the price we pay for beauty.
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