Barbara Sorensen
Barbara Sorensen’s large scale sculptural installations have long been inspired by nature, geological formations, the classical elements of art, and the diverse materiality of our ever-changing environment. Expanding on this foundation, her recent work includes a focus on the energy and dynamism of the environment through the creation of vessels and wall sculptures constructed of metal and resins, as well as experimental use of new and unexpected materials and textures, often interconnected, and chromatically bold. The new series emerges from early inspiration but with a renewed focus and interest in the relationships between human and landscape.
She is well known for her use of mundane material to create beauty out of the ordinary. Her current series, Ripples, uses metal to capture the movement of nature in water, wind, and sound. She is currently working on an immersive installation that expands upon the Ripples series by removing it from its grounding base. The massive structures float in the air and submerge the audience in an ephemeral environment of form and movement. Sorensen’s work also incorporates the sculptural possibilities of light and shadow. Works such as Dwellings and Pools reinterpret existing features of the natural landscape and utilize dynamic cast shadows to emphasize their form.
Sorensen’s work is in numerous museums, corporate and private collections. Among them are the Everson Museum of Art, Cornell Museum of Fine Art, San Angelo Museum of Fine Art, American Museum of Ceramic Art, Flint Institute of Arts, Newark Museum, Racine Art Museum, Mennello Museum of American Art, Florida State Capitol Art Collection, Orlando International Airport, Town of Snowmass Village, City of Orlando, City of Winter Park, Orlando Shakespeare Theater, SunTrust Bank, Darden Restaurant Corporation, Neiman Marcus Corporation, The United Company, The White House Collection, Washington, D.C., Stetson University and the University of Central Florida.
Sorensen’s work has been published widely in periodicals, texts and monographs including: Barbara Sorensen: Mennello Museum of American Art, (2017), Barbara Sorensen: Topographies (2010), Picturing Florida: From the First Coast to the Space Coast (2008), Finding Balance with curator James Surls (2006), Ceramics in the Environment by Janet Mansfield (2005), The Craft and Art of Clay, Third Edition, by Susan Peterson (cover image), (1999) and Architectural Ceramics by Peter King, (cover image), (1999).