ABINGTON, Pa. — When members of the campus community and area residents hit the walking paths at Penn State Abington over the next year, they will encounter something big in the outdoor amphitheater — Abu, an 8-foot tall acrylic sculpture that lights up from within after dark.
Yes, it’s a head, but it’s more than just a cranium. According to H. John Thompson, director of the Abington art gallery and associate teaching professor of art who spearheaded bringing the piece to campus, it’s a mediation on love.
“At the core of the piece is a very humanistic experience that we'll all share at some point, the witnessing of a loved one being sick and/or aging. This is where we can see the importance of the arts to inspire us to use technologies and processes to communicate important messages that are more often felt than described,” he said.
Abu was created by Philadelphia artist Miguel Horn to help process his emotions after his father was diagnosed with a serious illness several years ago. He specializes in developing large-scale public pieces using digital and analog processes, and his work often encompasses deterioration, memory and impermanence.
“I’ve scaled his likeness to monumental proportions, capturing the great presence he holds in our family’s lives. The surface is made up of layers of translucent acrylic sheet, stacked topographically to create his image. The fractured surface of this material reflects light from the surrounding environment and can muddle the overall image,” Horn said, describing its initial iteration.
In his role as gallery director, Thompson is charged with booking artists in part to serve as a living laboratory for students, although the gallery is open to the campus community and beyond. He felt Horn’s work straddled art practices so Abington student artists would benefit from exploring the sculpture and an exhibit of his related work with faculty and on their own time.
“His work integrates very traditional sculpture techniques with current technology, which mirrors the potential for intersecting disciplines we have here at Penn State Abington,” Thompson said.