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| Dumbball,
1983. Concrete. 4 inches diameter. Courtesy of the artist; Gallery
Paule Anglim, San Francisco; Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa
Monica, California; and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York. Photograph
by M. Lee Fatherree. |
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Dumbballs
Among the simplest artworks, yet the most revealing of Ireland’s
thought process, are his Dumbballs,
hand-sized spheres of concrete the artist began making around 1983.
Ireland makes them by continuously tossing a wet lump of concrete
back and forth between his hands until, after twelve hours or so
of this meditative action, the material dries into a natural rounded
form. The name Ireland gives to these unassuming gray balls refers
to the lack of artistic knowledge and skill needed to make them.
Like a snowball, a child can make one as well as a genius; it is
simply a matter of paying attention and being in the moment during
the hours of creation.
The Dumbballs are very important
to Ireland. To symbolize this, he often exhibits them in special
cases, such as his Dumbball Box (1983),
presenting the balls with the same care and attention that might
be given to religious or historical relics. “I wanted to
honor them and make them respectable, not a throw-away idea or
a gag or a joke. I wanted them to be seen as a signi€cant and important
process work,” he explains.
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