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Missouri
Artist Profile
Russ Rubert, Man of Steel
ArtlogueA publication of the Missouri
Arts Council
Editor: Don Dyer
Although
soft-spoken and not known to leap tall buildings
in a single bound, sculptor Russ RuBert is by many
measures a Man of Steel. Those who demand proof
for such super-hero claims need only look at RuBert's
artwork, the multi-talented person behind the work,
and his commitment to the hometown, vocational,
and virtual communities in which he lives.
A graduate of Glendale High School in Springfield,
where he was a math and science whiz, RuBert chose
large-scale sculpure as a vocation because it blends
his passion for art with his talent with computers
and technology. As a sculptor his medium of choice
is stainless steel, but he frequently uses othe
metals and incorporates neon, plastic, glass, and
other media. However, unlike most large-scale metal
sculptorswho give detailed drawings to steelworkers
to build the pieces for themRuBert design
and builds his own pieces in a 22,000-square-foot
artist studio that includes a cutting-edge computer
network with advanced imaging software that he developed;
photography and modeling spaces; an array of welding
and polishing equipment; laser cutters that slice
huge sheets of plate steel with microscopic precision;
girder hoists; a 60-foot Stinger crane, and much
more. The building used to house a peanut butter
factory.
Fusionism
Stainless steel represents one of the most recent
mediums available to artists, so it is no surprise
that RuBert's work has a modern feel. However, when
one thinks of steel, the images that come to mind
are anvils, bridges, battleships, trains, and so
on. But when critics review RuBert's sculptural
pieces they use terms like graceful, figurative,
witty, and playful, RuBert coined the term "fusionism"
to describe the creative process he uses to merge
the multicultural imagery that defines his style
with the large structural systems needed to mount
indoor and outdoor, site-specific, sculptural works.
Structurally, he achieves this fusion by incorporating
complex balance points and hidden structural elements
in his designs, and by computer-testing them for
stability and structural integrity before production
begins.
Community
Catalyst
Russ RuBert and his wife Pam, also an artist, contribute
much of their time, expertise, and resources to
local and national organizations. As a board member
of the Springfield Area Arts Council (SAAC), RuBert
has helped raise more than $3 million in endowments
for the 24 organizations in 19 communities that
formed the Greater Ozarks Arts Initiative. "
He's a great leader," confided Twyla Boutwell,
of the SAAC Staff. " He sees things from many
different sides." (X-ray vision?) She also
appreciates his down-to-earth style and recounted
a day when RuBert abandoned his busy afternoon schedule
to reconfigure and upgrade the SAAC computer system.
In November 2001 RuBert was elected to the board
of directors of the International Sculpture Center
(ISC), which reads like a "who's who"
of famous artists.
"I'm the token Midwesterner," he chuckled.
Among his contributions, RuBert developed the ISC's
Web Site Discussion Forum (at www.sculpture.org,)
which enables a virtual community of artists worldwide
to share information on production and technical
aspects of contemporary sculpture. RuBert's many
contributions to his hometown arts community and
the Springfield region have greatly enhanced the
cultural attractions of the community and helped
introduce the region to a worldwide audience of
cultural tourists. Bullets seem an appropriate method
to list RuBert's recent contributions:
RuBert joined the Springfield Area Arts Council
board of directors in 1997. As current president
of the board, he is helping revamp the cultural
plan and spearheading efforts to turn an old creamery
in Jordan Valley Park into an arts center.
As president of the Springfield Sister Cities
Association , he works to build better relations
between Springfield and sister city Isesaki, Japan.
In this effort he started the city's Japanese Fall
Festival, a popular tourist attraction, and instituted
an international cultural exchange program that
has generated more than 55 exchanges in 10 years,
including a United Nations-sponsored art exhibition.
RuBert is a founding member of the Springfield
Program for Public Art, which sponsors several local
arts programs.
As president of the Friends of the Springfield
Art Museum, RuBert started the Springfield Garden
Tours and helped establish several scholarships
and museum restoration projects.
RuBert is president of RuBert Design International,
his art and sculpture business, and RuBert Diversified
Investments, a company that developed Springfield
Industrial Park and works on other property redevelopment
projects.
RuBert's considerable talents first emerged nationally
in 1991-97 when he collaborated with Georgia State
University's Language Research Center in Atlanta
to create interactive art-and-technology environments
for cognitive research with chimpanzees. The project,
called Public Sphere, developed learning tools,
games, and symbolic language systems for disabled
children. The project was publicized in National
Geographic, Time, and Newsweek, and televised on
Nova and Discover.
For those who are just learning about the mild-mannered
Russ RuBert, it may seem as though he has stepped
straight out of a phone booth, like Clark Kent,
or from a Marvel comic. But for those who know him
through his art and community development work,
they only know that it would take a real-life super-hero
to replace him.
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All rights reserved | © Russ RuBert 1980 - 2007
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