'6 Times' is an attempt to reinvestigate the social responsibility of sculpture. The body in question is a particular body, but it doesn't really matter whose it is.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's extremely difficult to say what one actually means by 'sculpture' other than, in a provisional sense, it's something that goes on the floor or a pedestal, and loosely applies to a certain history of the use of that term.
Sculpture occupies the same space as your body.
Sculpture is something you bump into when you back up to look at a painting.
Sculpture occupies real space like we do... you walk around it and relate to it almost as another person or another object.
With a family of six, there is always something to make, create and do together.
Sculpture is the art of the hole and the lump.
It was a place that is trying to destroy the individual by every means possible; trying to break his spirit, so that he accepts that he is No. 6 and will live there happily as No. 6 for ever after. And this is the one rebel that they can't break.
The thing with sculpture is, 90% of the time, when I pass a piece of sculpture, it's in public or somewhere, and it's just, how inconvenient that that's there. It takes up so much room, and it's so oppressive.
It is a mistake for a sculptor or a painter to speak or write very often about his job. It releases tension needed for his work.
One must do the same subject over again ten times, a hundred times. In art nothing must resemble an accident, not even movement.
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