A man in Progress
Cécile B. Evans
9 individual objects
3D printed resin, hand painted; edition 1/5 (+ 2 AP)
120 × 100 × 10 cm
2017
Acquisition 2018
Inv. No. 0367
The artist Cécile B. Evans created A man in progress as part of an expansive work entitled Amos’ World1 (2017-2019). Amos’ World was produced as a farce of a television series over a period of two years, in which the ‘episodes’ outline a world - namely, the failed, Brutalist housing project by Amos, an egocentric architect. Evans describes A man in progress as a fragment of this world, as “part of an ongoing series of satellite sculptures, performances, and image-based works that unfold as reimagined fragments of the production, and the universe-building, of Amos’ World”1
The hands of the man in progress are of hand-carved clay and wood; the masks are sculpted with 3D technology and then painted by hand.2 The mask is that which serves as the face of the architect Amos. In his own words, he wants to “build something important. I want to change the world. I want to express myself.”3 The complexity of human interactions unfold in the ‘episodes’ and present, quite precisely, these all-too-human qualities. For, as the artist commented in 2016, “in the last twenty years we’ve lived in a society that really favors individualism and the idea that each person is unique and special. I think that within the work I’m more interested in not being that special, in loving the same things that everyone loves, of having the same fears or desires.” 4
Hans Ulrich Obrist, 2021 (translation: Virginia Dellenbaugh)
1) From the artist's portfolio: https://cecilebevans.com/images
2) Ibid.
3) https://www.art-agenda.com/features/257057/ccile-b-evans-s-amos-world