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Guus Jooss:

Serious play

14 July 2021 | 23 minutes

Guus Jooss, Aria II, 2020, statuario marble, in Studio Pescarella

Guus Jooss lives in Holland but comes to Pietrasanta in Italy for several months a year to work in marble.

Guus used to work as a museum teacher and researcher in the Netherlands when he wasn't creating his own art. Before that, he went to an art academy in Utrecht for a year, but mostly learnt about sculpture through doing the work himself. He also did some teaching and found himself describing for his students skills that he didn’t realise he'd learnt.

Guus Jooss, Onda, 2018, arabecato marble from the Cervaiole quarry on Monte Altissimo. This piece is still on show in Intrecciarte gallery in Pietrasanta

Guus Jooss, Night and day, 2016, statuario marble from Carrara

When working in marble he considers himself rather old-fashioned as his heroes are artists of earlier generations: Henry Moore, Constantin Brâncuși, Alberto Viani, Isamu Noguchi and Hans Arp, all of whom had a classical, figurative, training but then moved on to pure form. He likes the honesty of one form made in one material.

Guus Jooss, Raggio di luna, 2019, leopard marble from Turkey

Guus Jooss, Equilibrio, 2020, arabescato marble

With an affinity to antiquity, Guus makes collages that reference his love of history. Old civilizations that are lost are recreated by him in images which look a little like tapestries or Persian rugs. He’s fascinated by the regularity of geometric patterns that Islamic artists made in the sixth and seventh centuries. He talks us through his process and the way he expresses the layers of history.

Guus Jooss, Consilium III, 2020, 105 × 105 cm

Guus Jooss, Rotunda, 2020, 70 × 70 cm

Guus tells how Homo Ludens, a book by Dutch historian and cultural theorist Johan Huizinga, explains the importance of play in society. Like Huizinga, Guus believes that adult creativity should be approached with the same urgency that a child approaches play, that is to say, as a matter of life and death.

A keen swimmer, Guus found that open water swimming strengthened his lungs after what may, or may not have been, a dose of Covid. At the beginning of lockdown he enjoyed the chance to focus on work, but the need for a hug finally forced him to admit that isolation was actually a difficult experience.

Guus' new Dutch atelier

Since this episode was recorded in September 2020, we've had another winter of lockdown. Like others who moved out of towns and cities during the pandemic, Guus relocated from Utrecht to the countryside where he has fresher air and more studio space.

Credits

Producer: Sarah Monk

Sound edit/design: Guy Dowsett

Music: courtesy of Audio Network

  • Rivers 2 3362/43, Alex Arcoleo

  • Smoky Mountains 2 2457/56, Charlie Jefferson

  • Furry Friends 2 3394/44, David Edward Holden

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