| Creature comforts By Kris Vagner |
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| Rebekah Bogard | |||||||
| Two mouse-like beings snuggle together, eyes closed in oblivion. A long shelf is lined with identical, bug-like creatures whose upright wings and chameleon-like faces are rendered in raw, gray clay, waiting to be finished. These are the ceramic inhabitants of Rebekah Bogard's studio. In a recent gallery installation, creatures nearly human in size arched in ecstasy atop ceramic pedestals shaped like pillows, bathtubs or bubbles. The cute, cartoony beasts greeted each other with carnal curiosity. |
"I like to talk about things I like," she says unapologetically. The first things she mentions are basic creature comforts--sleeping and eating. |
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Rebekah Bogard works hard at being playful, with inspiration for her serious sculptures coming from places like Bambi and the Cartoon Network. |
"Who in their right mind would choose art [as a career]?" Rebekah Bogard says, laughing. For Bogard, it's a demanding job. The ceramicist is working in her basement studio at the University of Nevada, Reno on a public holiday, when most state employees are taking a break. She's almost always in the studio. She cranks out her labor-intensive sculptures--they require mold-making, casting, hand-building and painting--at a prolific rate. Bogard, 34, is a self-professed tomboy, unguarded and approachable with a big smile and an infectious giddy streak. "I'm inspired by Disney, Bambi and that kind of stuff. I love cartoons. I watch tons of TV," she admits. It may not be the first thing you'd expect to hear from an art professor. Bogard can keep up with academic discourse just fine, but she also believes in following her own path. |
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