Artists curate: Impact and satori--instruments of comprehension."THEY'RE ABOUT AWARENESS and a will to comprehend the world in its entirety," says Gabriel Orozco, referring to the disparate artworks presented here. "It's a question of focus and perspective, of the totality of perception, but it has nothing to do with New Age spiritualism spiritualism: see spiritism. spiritualism Belief that the souls of the dead can make contact with the living, usually through a medium or during abnormal mental states such as trances. ." On Kawara's super-reduced date paintings appear to represent the narrowest of perspectives, limiting themselves to a single point in time and space. Orozco experiences a similarly extreme concentration and focus in the grid In the Grid is a game show that airs on UK broadcaster Five at 6.30pm week nights. It first aired on Monday 30 October 2006. In the Grid is hosted by Les Dennis and is produced by Initial West, one of the Endemol UK companies. paintings of Agnes Martin and the color variations of Josef Albers. In each case, the limitation of perspective turns into its opposite. Singularity carries totality within. Lygia Clark's "Bichos," geometric instruments for manipulating perception, are reminiscent of tantric tan·tra n. Any of a comparatively recent class of Hindu or Buddhist religious literature written in Sanskrit and concerned with powerful ritual acts of body, speech, and mind. diagrams. The teaching of Tantrism Tan´trism n. 1. The system of doctrines and rites taught in the tantras. Tantrism 1. the teachings of the Tantras, Sanskrit religious writings concerned with mysticism and magic rituals. 2. describes a state of illumination brought about only by the rigorous application of rules. "For Tantra Tantra (tŭn`trə), in both Hinduism and Buddhism, esoteric tradition of ritual and yoga known for elaborate use of mantra, or symbolic speech, and mandala, or symbolic diagrams; the importance of female deities, or Shakti; cremation-ground has no dealings with fantasy. What it describes and maps is a world of realities," writes Philip Rawson in his classic introduction to the subject. Kurt Schwitters's collages, which combine linguistic and visual elements and mix incompatible scales, also attempt such a total accommodation of the world--without any religious overtones, of course. Even closer to everyday experience: Andre Cadere's painted bars of wood. He would stroll through an exhibition or down the Street with one of these brightly colored walking sticks, occasionally leaving one behind, in a corner. Their lurid patterns recall the sequences of colored discs in tantric maps of the universe, and indeed these modest interventions intensify our perception of the reality around them. But are Cadere's striped s ticks abstract representations posing as canes, or vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. ? DANIEL BIRNBAUM |
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