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In his sculpture, Jones meets the challenge of nature’s secrets head-on, and with equal prolificacy. Both a dedicated conservator and a lifelong hunter-gatherer, Jones’ sculptural efforts focus upon the darker side of nature, in which evolutionary fact sometimes becomes admixed with anthropomorphic allusion, in a cornucopia of life forms gone wrong. An uncomfortable relationship between man and beast, and suggestions of man’s beastly behavior, suffuse these works with an intrinsic strength of expression that is, at times, too close for comfort. Shadows sometimes suggested in Jones’ paintings become real as life in the three dimensions of his sculptural works.

 

Much of Jim Jones’ sculpture falls into several distinct categories. Several images of a human form in seemingly peaceful repose are broken by the fact that the material chosen for this serene expression is either agglomerated concrete or fur, alluding perhaps to human-animal ambiguities. Other human figures are shown either suspended or on pedestals, also in concrete or in fur, their postures suggesting supplication, shame or suffering, exuding an incipient religiosity that is simultaneously both pleasing and jarring.

 

Expressions of animal suffering, and of shackled humankind seem somewhat more straightforward, conceivably even cathartic in the historical sense, hence all the more poignant. One wonders whether man’s inhumanity to animals might be partially avenged in several of these works by the artist’s arbitrary admixture of man and beast, as if a deserved evolutionary slight to human arrogance. If these have been Jones’ intentions, such expressions of man’s beastly behavior have never been timelier than now.

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