Arts & Entertainment

New Sculpture in Wolfs Lane Park: Pelham Art Center

Heinz May combines his earliest visions and how humans relate to nature with his current home in NYC.

From Pelham Art Center:Pelham Art Center is announcing a new sculpture installation in Wolfs Lane Park by Anthony HeinznMay.

Massive trees on the edge of rural Oregon valleys and farmlands where Anthony Heinz May grew up root his
earliest memories. Much of his time was spent in contemplation of the natural world encompassing him. Still fascinated by nature and its complexity, Heinz May combines his earliest visions and how humans relate to
nature with his current home in NYC. The human constructed, squared world of concrete, steel and
glass inform his geometric grid overlapping of nature. The tree sculpture grows out of the ground like
a natural tree and is broken into units reminiscent ofpixels on screens that make up digital imagery.
The title Wiechquaes Keck honors the Native American tribe (Munsees) associated with the area of Pelham as originally called Wiechquaeskeck. The deed of the land conveyed to the Director General and Council of
New Netherland identified it as "Wiequaes Keck". Heinz May fused the two names in the title of the work. The artist does not cut down trees for his installations. He finds materials in a variety of natural, rural and urban places including parks, forested areas and wherever trees have been uprooted, cut-down or displaced by human activity and storms (which from the perspective of Heinz May and his artistic practice,
are arguably one and the same).

Heinz May uses chainsaws, band saws, hand pull saws, drills, chisels and angle grinders to carve the forms from the natural wood.

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The sculptures of Heinz May have been exhibited in city environments and rural landscapes. While in residency in Northern California at the Djerassi Artist Resident Program, Heinz May was given opportunity to work with a freestanding, dead Redwood in the thick of the woods there. The piece called "Hemetca Sii" uses a Costanoan/Ohlone word-phrase that translates as "One Water." Another
more remote sculpture developed from driftwood found along the St. Lawrence River in Quebec during a cultural exchange residency program. Installed on the small Quarry Island off the Côte-Nord region of Quebec, it's title is "Morte, Nature (Atsheneshu Atamatiku)", a rearrangement of the French words for "Still Life”: "Nature Morte", coupled with parenthetical Innu word-phrase meaning "infection in the heart of a tree". Visit www.anthonyheinzmay.com for more information about the artist.

PHOTO/ Pelham Art Center

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