FOR MUCH OF art history, figurative sculpture was steeped in a sense of the eternal. Ancient statues of leaders, heroes and gods tended to embody what their creators believed (or hoped) would endure forever. Now figurative sculpture reflects profound anxieties over permanence. Our bodies are bombarded by stuff — for example, the microplastic particles of broken-down goods that lodge in our testicles, guts and lungs — and our eyes by an onslaught of images. “When I think about all the garbage that is made and bought on Amazon every day, I find it absolutely terrifying and overwhelming,” said the Romanian-born artist Andra Ursuta, 45. “As someone who makes objects, I need to resolve that for myself, or whatever I make needs to engage with that.”
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