• GABRIEL KULKA

    STRAY GHOSTS & ECHOES

  • Stray Ghosts & Echoes (Aug 18 - Sep 30) features new works by Gabriel Kulka. Kulka's mixed-media sculptures are quiet yet assertive, mysterious yet approachable, always unexpected, always alluring. Harmonizing exquisite craftsmanship and compelling creativity, Gabriel entices our own imaginations toward his simple but fully realized subjects, their secrets and their stories.

     

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    BIO

     


     

    Stray ghosts and echoes. Echoes of stars. Echoes of stars and ghosts of memories. Ghosts of yesterday.

     

    Our relationship with time and the material universe presents an intriguing predicament: we spend our lives at the impossible precipice of each moment, at once drawn by our memories to the past while dabbling in considerations of the future. What precisely comprises the fleeting present? We occupy a strange ghost world, struggling for purchase on the shifting fabric of time, with the material world forever slipping through our fingers. Through our fingers slip structures of dust, structures held together by mild attractions, electrical and magnetic, just long enough for a person to live a life—a funny life tucked between three dimensions and time. Most days we accept the world as it is. But all around us are symptoms of the extreme and continuous efforts we make to function in this strange universe of echoes and ghosts.

    — Gabriel Kulka

     

    Gabriel Kulka’s mixed-media figurative sculptures are mysterious yet approachable, quiet yet assertive, always unexpected, always alluring. Harmonizing exquisite craftsmanship and compelling creativity, Kulka entices our imaginations toward these simple but fully realized subjects, their secrets and their stories. With minimal yet meticulous compositions, unexpected proportions, materials and joinery, Kulka's sculptures invite us to wander through our own pasts, and to examine how they inform, inspire and complicate the present.

     

    Kulka lives in Bozeman, MT, and has a workshop in nearby Belgrade. He is a working artist and carpenter; his artwork has been exhibited in galleries across Montana and around the country. When he is not buzzing around in his shop, Kulka spends time with his 6-year-old son, family and friends, exploring woods, riverbeds, mountains and ghost towns. This is his first art exhibition since losing part of his hand on April 1, 2022.