Sculpture - Early Works
Kazaz’s sculptural works run the stylistic gambit from the fine line mannered classicism of “Judas” through the bizarre “Cup of Life” to the macabre “Sacrifice.” His obsession with pushing bronze past its traditional static boundaries by inscribing intricate physical and psychological details on his figures and exposing them to exotic patination, imbue the works multiple personalities. So much so, being in their presence becomes an intensely sensual experience. “Sculpture like painting is an art of ambiguous surfaces” (Campbell S. J., 2002, “Fare una Cosa Morta Parer Viva”: Michelangelo, Rosso and the (Un) Divinity of Art, “The Art Bulletin, New York: College Art Association, Vol. LXXXI, No. 4, 609).
A handful of moral themes related to the nature of vice and fate are tied up within the story of “Judas” (bronze, 65”x34”x34”). Kazaz’s abundantly detailed study reveals the motives behind the betrayal of Jesus in a stunningly classical manner. Judas stands erect, is in forward motion, and tightly clutching his silver coins. His intoned body is not idealized and a wash with thin layers of dark reds and burnt umber patinas suggest his intimate physical relationship with the common tropes used to identify him – despair, treachery, pride, and his earthbound partner in crime, the devil. His face is a portrait of extreme anxiety. He looks over his right shoulder with a sense of apprehension and urgency as if he has just realized the magnitude of what he has done; his furrowed brow and wide eyes underscore his angst. His left arm is missing. This is a death sentence, in and of itself, in certain parts of the ancient world. The physical interplay between Judas’s movements, to his right and to his left place him into a conceptual relationship with the Holy Trinity. He stands there, much like Adam did in the garden after he partook of the apple, naked and ashamed, contemplating the reality of his unprotected future.
The “Cup of Life” (bronze, 55”x25”x27”), is a reflection on the complex strategy of the Holy Communion and its relationship to the human psyche – without the graces of the sacrament it is very difficult to resist grave temptations and avoid grievous sin. The top heavy, hulking male tilts his large, bulbous headpiece down towards the viewer. It is a teaming cornucopia of morphing fauna and flora, and contorted faces. Tortoises also populate the scene: a massive one lunges on top, and several are scattered around the base. Since the tortoise is a symbol of longevity, perhaps the cup of life is held by Father Time and the headdress represents the energy and massive matter of the defining our universe. The continuous morphing of these plants, animals, and faces take on an interactive quality, and place the viewer in a front row seat at the primordial ooze. The man’s solid verticalness also resembles the truck of a tree and alludes to both the trees of Knowledge and Life, and thus, the fall of man.
1992-1999
1992
Bronze 22x15x8
1998
Bronze
36x18x18
1999
Bronze
45x11x24
1997
Bronze
62x60x35
1996
Bronze 46x16x15
1993
Bronze 22x13x9
1993
Bronze 18x14x14
1997
Bronze 30x16x16
1992
Bronze 22x8x12
1993
Bronze 22x14x10
1996
Bronze 42x25x29
1999
Bronze
32x17x16
1997
Bronze
65x34x34
1995
Bronze
63x28x23
1994
Bronze
27x12x11
1993
Bronze 21x12x
1999
Bronze
26x18x10
Bronze
82x34x32
1992
Bronze 20x14x10
1992
Bronze 23x16x12
1993
Bronze 30x22x17
1993
Bronze 23x36x19
1993
31x26x18
1998
Bronze
27x47x27
1992
Bronze 23x13x15
1993
Bronze 47x32x16
2000-2002
2000
Oil on Fiberglass
51x53x7
2002
Bronze 61x28x31
2001
Bronze
39x22x28
2000
Oil on Fiberglass
24x24x5
2000
Oil on Fiberglass
24x24x5
2001
Bronze
32x12x16
2001
Bronze
2000
Bronze
30x22x16
2002
Bronze
31x29x12
2000
Bronze
29x30x17
2000
Oil on Fiberglass
33x38x8
2000
Bronze
58x55x42
2000
Oil on Fiberglass
33x38x8
2001
Bronze
24x25x27
2002-2004
2004
Bronze
37x16x15
2003
Bronze
30x17x17
2004
Bronze 32x16x14
Bronze
25x15x10
2004
Bronze
36x17x18
2004
Bronze
39x20x17


-1998-Bronze-36x18x18_scul01.jpg)













-1999-Bronze-32x17x16_scul01.jpg)
-1997-Bronze-65x34x34_scul01.jpg)
-1997-Bronze-65x34x34_scul02.jpg)
-1997-Bronze-65x34x34_scul03.jpg)




-1993-Bronze_21x12x12_scul.jpg)
-1993-Bronze_21x12x12_scul01.jpg)

1999-Bronze-82x34x32_scul01.jpg)
1999-Bronze-82x34x32_scul02.jpg)
1999-Bronze-82x34x32_scul03.jpg)
1999-Bronze-82x34x32_scul04.jpg)
1999-Bronze-82x34x32_scul05.jpg)
-1992-Bronze_20x14x10_scul01.jpg)
-1992-Bronze_23x16x12_scul01.jpg)



-1998-Bronze-27x47x27_scul01.jpg)
-1992-Bronze_23x13x15_scul01.jpg)







-2000-Oil_on_Fiberglass-24x24x5_scul01.jpg)







-2001-Bronze_scul01.jpg)






-2000-Oil_on_Fiberglass-33x38x8_scul01.jpg)


-2000-Oil_on_Fiberglass-33x38x8_scul01.jpg)























