Wonderful Life, 2002-2008

 

This series was completed in 2008, six years after its accidental inception. The title is shared with the 1989 publication by Stephen Jay Gould: “Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History.”

Wonderful Life is composed of 52 sculptural forms, made with various materials such as treads, wires, and beads. Each sculpture is assigned a masculine or feminine first name in alphabetical order, from Ann, 2002 to Zelig, 2008. "52 is essentially an arbitrary number," the artist said. "Evolution plays out with no understanding of its beginning and obviously no understanding of its end. So 52 could have become 104, and it could have become 208. It could have gone on forever."

This sculptural work makes manifest Steven Siegel’s interest in evolutionary biology. It is inspired by Gould’s book and the recent revolution in theories of evolution. In “Wonderful Life,” Gould argues that during this period following the Cambrian explosion, the disparity of anatomical body plans was actually greater than today: “Because of the disparity of the Burgess Shale and later decimation we must invert the conventional cone of increasing diversity,” concludes Gould. “Instead of a narrow beginning and a constantly expanding upward range, multicellular life reaches its maximal scope at the start, while later decimation leaves only a few surviving designs.”

Siegel’s elaborate pieces reference the boundless diversity of forms of the Cambrian Explosion. As stated by Gary Walker, Biologist: “What's unusual about the art of Steven Siegel is that he was inspired by such creatures as those found in the Burgess Shale but has created detailed representatives of his own conceptualizations in very much the same way that evolutionary processes lead to the origins of previously unknown forms of life. Seeing something such as his creations in Wonderful Life is a stimulation very much like that experienced at first glance of something new to us in the world.”

Wonderful Life has been exhibited numerous time, notably at Penn State Berks, Freyberger Gallery, Albright College, Freedman in 2010, at Turchin Center for the Visual Arts, Boone, NC, in 2009; at Grounds for Sculpture  Hamilton, NJ, in 2006; and at Montalvo Arts Center Gallery, Saratoga, CA in 2005.

Catalogue Texts

This series was completed in 2008, six years after its accidental inception. The title is shared with the 1989 publication by Stephen Jay Gould. The image above is of the 52nd, and final piece. The images that follow are in both chronological, and alphabetical order. For further explanation, information, and catalog essays by John Perreault and Gary Walker, please refer to the Essay page of this website.
Ann 2002 44x15x15
Adam 2002 32x15x15
Betty 2003 29x23x17
Bob 2003 41x19x11
Clyde 2003 56x39x9
Carol 2003 58x53x12
Dave 2003 80x62x14
Debbie 2003 60x40x20
Eli 2003 42x32x20
Erin 2003 55x36x20
Fran 2003 59x50x20
Fred 2003 40x30x13
Gary 48x28x11
Gloria 36x16x16
Harry 32x39x22
Helen 36x23x20
Ian 2003 46x42x21
Izzy 2003 44x38x25
Jan 2004 50x50x20
John 60x42x28
Karen 67x48x22
Kyle 37x33x20
Laura 2004 44x31x21
Larry 2004 52x32x22
Martha 2004 42x26x18
Mel 2004 38x26x18
Nathan 2004 36x24x18
Nora 2004 23x29x18
Owen 2003 37x27x17
Oivia 2004 37x27x18
Peter 2005 39x30x15
Pam 2005 24x26x18
Quincey 2005 40x45x18
Quentin 2005 30x42x20
Quentin 2005 30x42x20
Rose 2005 50x44x17
Rose, detail
Rex 2005 51x44x22
Rex, detail
Sonia 2005 42x45x21
Sy 2005 57x44x23
Studio view
Tracy 2005 53x55x22
Thor 2006 58x62x24
Thor, detail
Umberto 2006 34x94x22
Umberto, detail
Uma 2006 44x90x20
Uma detail
Vaughan 2006 30x100x22
Vaughan, detail
Veronica 2006 19x107x16
Walker 2007 63x63x25
Walker, detail
Wynona 2007 99x56x22
Wynona, detail
Xavier 2007 54x70x24
Xenia 2007 81x57x25
Xenia, detail
Xenia, detail
Yoshiko 2007 54x94x22
Studio View
Yaeger 2007 52x75x24
Yaeger, detail
Zena 2008 72x52x25
Zelig 2008 68x84x24
  siegelstudio10@gmail.com  Tivoli NY