Deborah Wing-Sproul 

Performance artist and sculptor Deborah Wing-Sproul reflects on social, cultural, economic, and political inequities amplified by the events of 2020 in her new work, Meet me at the pool.

This performance and sculpture are informed by community lockdowns and isolation as well as the tension between presence and absence. The swimming pool—a place of social exclusivity and a sign of wealth and leisure—is the starting point of investigation.  

Wing-Sproul examines the concept of the swimming pool during a time that has witnessed homelessness, poverty, and social disparity. She intentionally constructs the three pools out of concrete; each one weighs 350 pounds. For her, “its weight and immobility capture the feeling of this year and the immense social challenges before us.” 

The initial performance explored the four states of the pools: Pool, Fire, Wash, and Rest. The unseen performer repurposes a sign of privilege into the provision of essential needs. Viewers are invited to imagine the performer’s movements, such as filling the pools, draining them, destroying and burning the wood pallet, and creating a space for rest. In a journey from wealth to poverty, the photographs show a swimming pool transformed over time by the needs of an unknown and unseen person.  

Wing-Sproul’s pools were not installed in the gallery due to complexities of moving the heavy sculptures during the pandemic. Instead, a companion video highlights the pools’ physicality. The artist asks us how we got here. Is this sleep or death? Is this the imprint left by a body no longer at rest? Or, is the shallow depth of the cloth suggesting that there are only skeletal remains? All is uncertain except that some actions were performed and left this evidence. Meet me at the pool is about everybody yet there is no body present at the pool.  

 
 

Watch the April 15, 2021 “Conversations with Maine Artists in a ______ Time” with artists Steve Bartlett, Rachel Church, Charles Schreiber, and Deborah Wing-Sproul.

peach-1.jpg

“This piece is going to mean different things to different people. For me, it symbolized a sense of loss and permanency. While it is not sad necessarily, its tones and textures made me feel lost and lonely.”

- Jeremy FreyUntitled juror 


EXPLORE MORE ARTWORKS FROM UNTITLED, 2020