Martha Glowacki’s Natural History, Observations and Reflections Martha Glowacki’s Natural History | Page 15

Figure 9. Martha Glowacki (American b. 1950), Lacuna (mirror box illusion) (detail), 2016, cast iron, bronze, wood, mirrors, marbleized paper, animal bones, pigments, 42 x 24 x 24 in. Photo Mike Rebholz. with the bones of birds, emerging shoots, and castings of bees (Figure 9). This landscape recalls something of the exterior of Hieronymous Bosch’s triptych, The Garden of Earthly Delights. At first glimpse, with its grayish mono- chrome, our planet may appear to be barren, but in fact what we are seeing is the world coming into being, or, in the case of Glowacki’s installation, a wintry sheen with color creeping in, hints of spring’s eventual green. The terrain that Glowacki has created in her Lacuna multiplies outward by way of mirroring walls. The expansion would be terrifying were it not that the delicate design of ornithology—the vertebral structure and rib cage are almost lacelike, even where the bones are broken off—draw the eye back to the small skele- tons on the mound. One feels grateful to be permitted this view of the frail nature of things that death yields. Standing above the box, the viewer has the sense that she is peering into something private and precious, yet whose boundaries are uncontained. Thus the seemingly bottomless hole at the center of this piece—it has the concavity of a volcano post-eruption, a dark abyss— might read not as devastating but as generous. The void acknowledges the unknowability to the artist of where her viewer’s minds may go. Making available for display the acknowledgment of the privacy of another—this seems to me to be half of Glowacki’s art. It is the half that stores in drawers gathered bones, honeycombs, and desiccated corpses 11