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Attachment 1 <br /> ;', # , <br /> a at.':x .furR ,�1" a{..y t <br /> • <br /> C <br /> Painted Bronze 72 x 29 x 15 S42.000 <br /> JULIE SPEIDEL-"Slogae <br /> Julie Speiddfs sculptures engage an extraordinary array of cultural influences, reaching back through antiquity to <br /> the stone- and bronze-age peoples of Europe, the early Buddhists of China, the indigenous tribes of her native Pacific <br /> Northwest, and on into twentieth-century modernism. Depending on our own spheres of knowledge, we may find in her <br /> work echoes of the British Steel megalithic stone structures, Cycladic Greek fertility figures, Native American totem poles, <br /> and dozens of other iconic cultural forms, some universally recognized, others buried by history. At the same time, her <br /> work is strongly linked to that of modernists like Henry Moore and Picasso,who were likewise enormously influenced by the <br /> language of antiquity and sought to reinterpret it through a contemporary lens. <br /> The inspiration for my work is rooted in the power of travel," Speidel remarks, and indeed, her sculptures <br /> assimilate cultural influences in a manner reminiscent of traveloque-organic and intuitive, not academic or preordained. Her <br /> work encourages in to make complex associations, but it delights as well in purely formal properties; color, carefully poised <br /> compositions, the natural qualities of bronze, Sass, and state. Seen in a landscape, Speidells sculptures have a Zen-like <br /> relationship with the surrounding area, humbling themselves to the natural world while simultaneously enhancing it, <br /> amplifying its effect.This, perhaps,is among the most remarkable aspects of Speidells sculpture; its capacity to engage in <br /> dialogue with the ward-not only with its natural elements,but also with the whole of human history and art. <br />