Visiting Christopher Puzio’s Studio was a real treat: his work plays a lot on the “frame the view” concept, a key sub-line from the beginning of Reinventingrid, back in January 2017. That is how my eye travels: I simply love capturing in pictures how some art installations encapsulate what lies around them. Bringing the world to attention…

Looking through Christopher Puzio, Island Arbor (2013)
San Diego is incredibly fortunate to have many Christopher Puzio works around. All have this uncanny versatility of framing a view while opening up space. He is literally, and figuratively, drilling on what an open work can be.

Looking through Christopher Puzio, Island Arbor (2013)
This right there inscribes the sculptural works of Christopher Puzio into an architectural quest which started with the Gothic style, walking the line between what History of Architecture professor Ian Sutton describes as “an aesthetic of line rather than mass”.
Christopher walks this line with every artwork, never compromising the silhouetted lines of his repeated patterns with the solidity of his materials of choice.

Christopher Puzio, Island Arbor (2013)
Finding inspiration for his motifs during trips to the desert, Christopher creates works which heighten the perception of our surroundings yet also extend the space inhabited.

Christopher Puzio, La Jolla Crossroads, 2016
As his metal lattices soar up, their physical materiality poetically expands into an immaterial shadow play of ravishing beauty.
Working metal like lace, Christopher Puzio creates works never shying away from their industrial nature as they reach the delicacy of architectural jewelry.

Christopher Puzio Studio
This incredible duality between sturdy materials (corten steel or bronze) and the dream catching effect of the shadows projected, courtesy of the San Diego sun, is what got me hooked in the first place.

Christopher Puzio, La Jolla Crossroads, 2016
Perhaps it is all about light once more: it’s always been all about light but I am glad San Diego’s public art makes the most of it by filteringit through Christopher Puzio’s pieces.

Christopher Puzio, Cresta, 2013
If you decide you want this at home, he can work smaller scales.
Now you decide if you see Puzio works as gates, delineating spaces neatly, or screens allowing you to see while only partially being seen. I guess it all depends on your mood and your perceptions, how open or close you feel that day.

Christopher Puzio, La Jolla Crossroads, 2016
But can you resist the adventures that his web of cast shadow reflections invite you to?
Personally, I travel back to the Moorish motives of Granada’s Alhambra and the mashrabiya screens of Fatehpur Sikri in India. The shadow plays of the harem’s pierced screens are full of mystery. Can you see in? Can they see out?
Here and there, no matter how harsh, light is filtered to an ornamental patterned quality.
Sometimes it is even hard to spot where the sculptured metal ends and where the shadow starts. To me, this solders the world under our sun with the world of our thoughts while at the same time opening channels to go between the two.
This reminded me of a recent trip to Chicago where I got to experience another public artwork focused on Light and Space: Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate.

Anish Kapoor, Cloud Gate, 2006
Enjoying it pretty much on my own during my early morning run, the reflective facture of its polished steel brought the sky and surrounding Chicago skyline closer to me and fostered meditative thoughts and reflections, in all sense of the term. It acted as a portal bringing the sky and world to a closer and more immediate space, allowing my mind to dive inward.
Later that day, the same sculpture became a social magnet, a “gathering” in the 1960s performance art sense, coined by Allan Kaprow. People flocked to Cloud Gate, met up, put on a show: the world coming down, feeling and experiencing outward.
Looking again and again at what Christopher Puzio builds, I see portals to travel between these “worlds”, to step into the view right in front of us. For readers of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, they may as well be windows onto parallel worlds.

Christopher Puzio, Island Arbor (2013)
Take Harbor Island for example. It frames Downtown San Diego beautifully and YOU choose how big you want your frame to be, or which facet of the city you want to focus on.

Christopher Puzio, Island Arbor (2013)
That to me is the power public art can have…and we need more of it. Luckily, downtown San Diego is getting this one soon.

Christopher Puzio Studio (Photo Credit C. Puzio)
To learn more about Christopher Puzio and his stunning works, check his website.
For other Artist Studio visits on Reinventingrid, check here.
© 2018 Ingrid Westlake
All pictures by Ingrid Westlake, unless otherwise stated.
Thank you for the tour, Ingrid! Wonderful concept and execution. I like how these structures affect the space and light of their surroundings. Your shot of “Looking through Christopher Puzio, Island Arbor (2013)” made me think of a puzzle or a map where each circle outlines an important element: the palm tree, the clouds, the buildings.The shadow patterns also made me think of the Orient and Alhambra, like you mentioned. How enchanting and mesmerizing.
Thank you, Gabriela! Wonderful sights to behold…and then to travel from with our minds. Christopher Puzio has much, much talent and a wonderful eye onto the world, its light and space…🙏🏼
I followed you on Twitter! 😉
Thank you, Gabriela. I don’t really know how to use Twitter so if you have a tutorial or good tips to help, I’d be grateful.
Interesting, and it is in San Diego! Very nice pictures. Thanks again for sharing! Nathalie
Yes, in San Diego and many other places in California and beyond. Will take you around next time you visit?😘
Hi Ingrid – I like that “dream-catcher” effect and all of the shadows that your photos of Christopher Puzio’s pieces have captured. I feel a bit jealous of San Diego; but, since you visited Chicago, you know how much great public art we have on view, here.
One of the great things about visiting “Cloud Gate” is being a part of the crowds who are looking at their reflections in it while walking all around and underneath it and trying to decide on the best angles to take photos with it!
Indeed, Leslie, Chicago has AMAZING public art: I feel I barely scratched the surface of it in 3 days so I cannot wait to be back one day.
Cloud Gate is indeed what public art should be: reflective, playful, gathering and…photogenic (with or without crowds 😉). You are lucky to have this beauty!
Beautiful creations! They bring either shade or light ! places for reflection !
It’s light and so well integrated into a city’s decor ! urban jewels !!
It is a beauty of the environment !
Bravo Mr Puzio !!
So glad you liked those, Marie-Annick! I want a structure like this on my deck 🙏🏼
OH this dream catcher wears well his name!.Fantastic shadows and ligths with metal bridge…Cloud Gate is original by her reflections…love all these effects. and the best photo is yours when you pose with your diamond shapped bag…good effect.
Thank you🙏🏼 I am so glad you like the works of Christopher Puzio. He is an incredibly talented local artist and his sculptures are ever-changing, for the pleasure of all art lovers.