"Cement Eclipses"Image of Cordal's uniform figures plodding along. Isaac Cordal "Home" Brussels, Belgium. 2010
The vastness of the world can become limited by the familiar as we march or stumble or crawl mindlessly through the habitual behaviors of day-to-day existence, creatures of habit as we are. With the simple act of miniaturization and thoughtful placement, London based Spanish street artist Issac Cordal magically expands the imagination of pedestrians finding his sculptures on the street.
Waiting for another interview? Issac Cordal "Businessman" Brussels-Belgium. 2010
With the master touch of a stage director, his figures are placed in locations that quickly open doors to other worlds that you don't know of, but evidently exist.
The solitary figure balances on barbed wire. Isaac Cordal "Border". Hackney, London. 2010
"Cement Eclipses", is a project of small cement sculptures that began while Cordal studied fine arts in Pontevedra, Spain in the early 2000s. Meant as a critique of the rapid overdevelopment (and subsequent public debt hangover) of the Spanish coast over the last decade, "The figurines represent a kind of metamorphosis through which an urban human leaves his role of citizen and begins merging with the city and slowly becomes part of urban furniture," explains the artist. More broadly the installations can be interpreted as post-modern alienation, complete with feelings of dislocation in the built environment.
Isaac Cordal "Climate Change Survivor". Hackney, London. 2010 Some figures march lock-step with slumped shoulders single file, overwhelmed and pummeled into conformity. Single figures freeze bewildered in an artificial environment of concrete, molded plastic, and urban residue.
Isaac Cordal "Empty Fridge" Brussels, Belgium. 2010
Singular men and women are suspended and isolated in a motion or pose that can take on multiple meanings. The sympathetic figures are easy to relate to and to laugh with; meticulously placed in scenes that provide a looking glass into a world strangely akin to your own.
Isaac Cordal "Public Swimming Pool" London, UK. 2010
Describing the characters and the world they live in, the artist talks about urban man's "voluntary isolation and alienation from nature, hiding himself among sidewalks, streets, walls," and you can almost feel sorry for the figurines. And you might knowingly chuckle.
All images are courtesy of the artist and are ©Isaac CordalVisit the artists site for more on his Cement Eclipse project here:
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