
The EYE’s are a permanent sculpture that was commissioned for the 75th anniversary of Williams College by the sculptor Louise Bourgeois in 2001. They are lit up at the nighttime and are quite creepy when you’re driving past later in the evening. The large stone slab sculptures are of an environmental type but it’s also has a more abstract modern feel as well. It’s very different from anything I’ve ever encountered and the different sizes really make this one of my favorite pieces.
This granite slab with bronze along with electric lights which make them light up in the night is a the perfect medium for an outdoor sculpture because it being in the northeast we do tend to have heavy winters so it’s need to be durable but still be pleasing to the eye as well which is no easy feat. As you walk up to this you’re immediately taken aback by the first two large eyes that make up the base but as you look at the smaller eyes on the left side you can appreciate the large and small aspects and also how the angles on the oval shapes are arranged where they each point in a more nothernly direction
Your vanishing point is directly poking the large eyes and there is a slant in the forefront smaller eye, but this is only true from the front side it has three dimensional form. As we move around the statue the vanishing point all but disappears in the back and it become just another granite circle with a boring kind of brown-grey color with a few raised bumps and lines and it ceases to become unique. From the side it has only one dimensional form and is must less impressive with very little illusion of movement which from the front when you walk past you can feel the eyes almost move with you watching your every move.
At night when the lights go on there’s a dramatic difference, it goes from a large rock with eyes carved into it to an eerily disembodied masterpiece which can be seen from the road as you drive past or when you’re on the campus walking past. The one eye that lacks a proper eyelid especially catches the attention because it truly feels as though it might float off the sculpture and attack you or follow you home. After all, it is a free standing group sculpture which is a common form when you’re carving stone; what most impresses me about her choice of granite is because it’s such a solid and more difficult medium to work with, it really shows her skill and talent as an sculptor and shows her very deserving of being the first woman to have an exhibit in the MOMA in NYC.







