Another Sun
Cella Costanza
4.11.2026 - 5.23.2026
Cella Costanza’s Another Sun by Mick Toma
As deep automation begins crystallizing life's variables into formats and systems that we
cannot even access, time gets weird. Time totally lapses or swells into numbing proportions.
How long is this supposed to take? Where did the day go? Cella Costanza is keeping track of
time. Her show, Another Sun, presents six sculptures carved from different types of stone–
banded calcite onyx, brecciated marble, iron stained calcite marble, and ferruginous sandstone.
Immediately powerful and refreshing in material technique alone, these forms also serve a
philosophy beyond their obvious showcase of skill. Costanza refers to them as "sundials," and
while they appear sturdy, ancient, and vaguely functional in the way sundials do, they mimic a
form more like a key, or maybe a chair. Perhaps, even a hair comb, which the artist tells me is
really just a chair without a seat. Each of the five forms vary from the other, with differing flecks
and ridges of strata in each stone, but they all maintain essential shape components. Sequential,
maybe evolutionary, and somewhat playful– can these sculptures measure time?
These sundials are ultimately problematic, but that is their charm and conceit.
Malfunction and misfelt time is what Costanza seeks to call to our attention. Traditional sundials
feature a "gnomon," the stationary appendage that works by being consistently inert as the sun
moves around it, but Costanza's sundials don't function traditionally. This stone materializes time
itself, in the compression, slipping, and shift of earth over millennia. By cutting into it, Costanza
has made available the timeline of creation, exposing the mountain building, oceanic mantle
shifts, and fluid alternation that has happened over millions of years. If, per the idea of Francis
Bacon, great artists are trying to “trap a living fact,” it appears that Cella Costanza is doing the
opposite, releasing a fact and exposing something living in the stone, its slow and moody history.
In Constanza's world anything can be a gnomon, even, and especially, an object that shifts,
because for Costanza time might not exist in order to be measured and the world might be
transforming too much to hold anything still. A serious refusal of short-lived precision and
accuracy is at the unshakeable foundation of Costanza's practice, and this collection of work
outlines just that.
Information is the product of measuring– we're measuring a lot; we have a lot of
information. And while information is obviously useful, it has also obviously become so plenty
that it's almost impossible to take in. The pieces yield differently to a metaphorical sun– they
rebel against precision so that they can offer less information, and from unexpected and profound
sources, not more and not directly. Costanza's practice responds to urgency by sitting and carving
the world– a gesture of tracing her own personal time, in communion with raw earth, and
remembering pace as something natural and felt. In doing, Costanza's sculptures forge a way out
of our collective information hypnosis.
