Arts & Entertainment Studio view: Artist Orly Genger sits atop her 2007 work to be eichibited at Leinberg Gallery, Artist attracts viewers with sculptures incorporating knitting and crocheting techniques. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News 0 rly Genger can't seem to give herself enough rope — artisti- cally speaking. The material is at the core of her sculp- ture, and she keeps devising new configu- rations for it. Genger, a New Yorker about to have her first exhibit in Michigan, will spend a week in the area, speaking to the artistic com- munity, visiting studios and working with students to install a large-scale new work. The artist's appearances surround Posedown, an installation on view Sept. 29-Nov. 10 at the Lemberg Gallery in Ferndale. She will speak as part of the College for Creative Studies Woodward Lecture Series at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 27, in the Walter B. Ford Building on the Detroit campus. "The large-scale installation is made out of nylon rope, which essentially is used for rock-climbing," says Genger, 28, whose family is from Israel. "All the rope was painted black using latex paint. "Posedown comes from a term used to describe a stage in a body-building con- test. The contestants come out and dem- onstrate different poses to show off their bodies, and all the contestants try to outdo one another. "The installation will have this feeling of a competition between different elements. That's the basic concept of the show." Genger has invented her own way to adapt knitting and crocheting techniques while creating post-minimal sculpture. With her hands as tools, she builds knots into forms. Recent exhibits have been at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Conn.; Socrates Sculpture Park in Long Island City, N.Y.; the Haifa Museum of Art in Israel; and the Stux Gallery and Elizabeth Dee Gallery in New York. "I always drew but got involved with making sculpture while I was at Brown University," says Genger, who will meet with Cranbrook art students. "I knew then that I wanted to take it very seriously. "After college, I went to the Art Institute of Chicago and had a teacher who showed me how to crochet. I remember watching the hook move and thinking it was getting in the way. "The movement of the hook seemed natural for me to do with my fingers, and I started to use my finger as the hook. It seemed like a more direct way of dealing with the material." A commission for a sculpture garden introduced her to using heavy-duty rope. "I was looking for a material that would be able to sustain the outdoors, and I found climbing rope," she explains. "It has to be a high-quality product because people's lives depend on it." Genger gets her materials through a manufacturer in New England. After the rope takes on various shapes and sizes, she applies color with a large sprayer. In her studio close to home, the sculptor needs the help of assistants because of the size of her projects. "I'm a very directed person and like to feel I have control:' she explains. "There's a primal satisfaction having a full day of physical concentration. "When I'm going through a period cre- ating installations, spending many hours a day with heavy material, I feel my fingers and hands get stronger. They hurt, too, and I'm watchful of that because I want to be able to continue." Genger, who is single, was born in New York but lived for two early years in Israel. She returns once a year to visit family. "Because I am Jewish and Israeli, reli- gion has to do with who I am and every- thing I make, but themes of Judaism never have been literal:' she says. Genger's influences, conceptual and aesthetic, have included Claus Oldenburg, Eva Hesse and Richard Tuttle. A mix of approaches merges as she sculpts from early morning until early evening. "I write short stories, but I haven't tried to publish them," she says. "They help with my ideas. They're a place to flush out everything that goes on in my head. "It's interesting to read them a month Roping Them In on page 50 September 20 • 2007 43