
The five sculptures of Teetering on the Brink
John Bissonette has mounted an exhibition of new sculpture in the great stone hollow that is the Rotunda Gallery, where not only the physical space but most of the viewing public, passing through because of some inconvenient piece of civic business, are ambivalent to such art shows. Bissonette has experienced this dubious relationship first hand: one of his prior sculptures was damaged in the course of a recent group exhibition in the gallery. The piece, titled “Thanks” and featuring those words in the artwork, took a sarcastic turn after the incident, which saw a styrofoam chair break as if from a bar brawl. A serendipitous accident, and as of my last visit to the gallery, unrepeated in the new show.
This effort, entitled “Teetering on the Brink,” features five human-scale sculptures made from materials that, in their various ways, evoke a fragility that feels specific to Las Vegas. Styrofoam, drywall, a mirrored closet door, an abused shopping cart, some glitter; some if not all of these materials would appear in a Las Vegan’s top ten list of stuff that comprises our city. Styrofoam is the standout ingredient here, a material that Bissonette has carved and glued to represent, at full scale, 1) a 6-foot utility ladder, 2) a wrought-iron chandelier, and 3) a vase and floral arrangement atop a narrow table.
Discussing the styrofoam’s qualities is both obvious and necessary, because the material hits a target in this context that I never saw until now. Clearly, it is a brittle, fragile, formally temporary yet chemically eternal substance; and, that it depicts both objects of construction and interior design in these pieces highlights how those qualities shape Las Vegas’s dynamic economic duo of development and tourism. Bissonette’s gesture of depicting iconic yet banal Vegas objects in styrofoam avoids a minefield of cliches by being modest and straightforward. The works lack the pretension of a topical social agenda through their craft: while they are not spot-on perfect likenesses of what the pieces represent (webs of hot glue here, clunky lettering there) the sculptures embody the artist’s labor and care. These are proudly hand-made objects.

Grey contemplating the used-car-lot-flags that frame this styrofoam depiction of a ladder.
More importantly, I think, is the play of stark white styrofoam against the different textures of earth-tone stone in the gallery. Material connotations are beautifully reversed here: wide, glossy brown floors and high, rough-hewn stone walls feel cold and sterile as the background for artificial, yet hand-crafted styrofoam, the softness of which becomes human, even sensual. The long, curving arms of the chandelier sigh a little breath of life as they sag and bend under their own weight. The ladder is rigid but friendly, and the vase and flowers, against the deep red background trimmed with white molding, is frankly more lovely than any arrangement you’d find in the Bellagio or Palazzo.
The physical poetry of these pieces in this particular environment makes your gut say, “mmm hmmm, yes,” so that you can start to think about the clearly local implications of this artwork from a quiet place, a mental lotus position. Rounded out by a post-minimal, drywall-paint-mirror piece, which is a different kind of formal antidote to the infinitely stone gallery environment, and a shopping cart that buckles under the weight of its full glitter-load, the show reminds me of a quote by Israeli-born artist Michal Rovner: “My affinity is to not judge, not even to comment. I only ask questions and wish for peace.” This aesthetic stance is not for every artist, but something like this comes to mind as you walk among these sculptures. By way of criticism, I would suggest that this show’s title goes too far in commentary and judgment, for while the works here do teeter on the brink of just lasting the two month duration of this exhibition, the phrase also transcends the show and admonishes Las Vegas for its multi-tiered fragility. This fin-de-siecle tone needs no statement here; by virtue of the work alone, the exhibition handles nuances of vulnerability, haste, permanence, and care.
Click here to watch John Bissonette talk about this show.
“Teetering on the Brink” at the Clark County Government Center Rotunda Gallery through March 12.














