Book smart: Chrissie Iles on John Latham.THE PASSING OF John Latham John Latham may refer to:
Gordon was born in Glasgow and studied art first there (at the Glasgow School of Art) from 1984-1988 and later at the Slade School from 1988-1990 in London. His first solo show was in 1986. , Hans-Ulrich Obrist, myself, and many others, through his rebellious approach to authority, and his far-reaching ideas regarding the role of art and the artist. Latham's career began in the drab environment of Britain in the aftermath of World War II, against a backdrop of cold-war anxiety. Like that of his American counterpart Robert Rauschenberg
Robert Milton Ernest Rauschenberg (b. October 22 1925 in Port Arthur, Texas) is an American artist who came to prominence in the 1950s transition from Abstract , to whom he is often compared, Latham's early work had an existential quality. His unprimed canvases and spray-gun or action-based mark-making raised fundamental questions about the end of painting and the dissolution of the body. Figures emerging out of voidlike surfaces evoked the ethereal body prints of Yves Klein Yves Klein (28 April 1928 - 6 June 1962) was a French artist and is considered an important figure in post-war European art. New York critics of Klein's time classify him as neo-Dada, but other critics, such as Thomas McEvilley in an essay submitted to Artforum in 1982, have since , dispersing the image into a dematerialized state that questioned the very basis of representation. From the late '50s onward these elusive figures were replaced by books, which became Latham's primary material. Books were either affixed af·fix tr.v. af·fixed, af·fix·ing, af·fix·es 1. To secure to something; attach: affix a label to a package. 2. to or extending out of canvases or arranged in freestanding sculptures, and their pages, which were painted or burned, resembled the ruptured skin of the body turned inside out. If the body is the site of language, Latham's constructions implied a collapse of the social body. In the early '60s, Latham was part of a burgeoning London art scene The defining moment for the contemporary London art scene was Freeze, the 1988 warehouse exhibition organised by Damien Hirst. Up to that point, the traditional career path for an artist in London would involve several years in relative obscurity with limited sales, that included Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Peter Blake, Yoko Ono, and Gustav Metzger. He began receiving critical attention internationally, showing with Kasmin Gallery in London, and making actions involving sculpture, poetry, and film in the basement of Better Books on Charing Cross Road Charing Cross Road is a London street which runs north from Trafalgar Square to St Giles' Circus (the intersection with Oxford Street) and then becomes Tottenham Court Road. It is so called because it leads from Charing Cross. . His interest in temporality tem·po·ral·i·ty n. pl. tem·po·ral·i·ties 1. The condition of being temporal or bounded in time. 2. temporalities Temporal possessions, especially of the Church or clergy. Noun 1. led to an increasing use of destruction as an artistic tool and a definition of his paintings as "time-based," operating within an "event framework." He participated in the Destruction in Art Symposium The Destruction in Art Symposium (DIAS) was a gathering of a diverse group of international artists, poets, and scientists to London, from 9th-11th September, 1966. Included in this number were representatives of the counter-cultural underground who were there to speak on the theme in London in 1966 (with Wolf Vostell, Al Hanson, Gunter Brus, Jasia Reichardt, Ono, and Pete Townshend of the Who, among others), making what he described as a series of "Skoob towers." These objects, towers of books to which he set fire, existed as what Latham termed "sculpture in reverse" ("skoob" is "books" spelled backward). That is, they exist only at the point of their destruction. Asked about the nihilism nihilism (nī`əlĭzəm), theory of revolution popular among Russian extremists until the fall of the czarist government (1917); the theory was given its name by Ivan Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons (1861). of these book-burning events, Latham replied, "Perhaps the cultural base had been burnt out." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The violence Latham inflicted on books was given its most notorious expression in an action titled Still and Chew/Art and Culture in 1966-67. Latham, then a part-time tutor at St. Martin's School St. Martin's School is a private, co-educational school located in Rosettenville, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa. History St Martin’s School traces its origins back to the foundation of St. Agnes School for the training of domestic helpers in 1908. of Art, borrowed a copy of Clement Greenberg's then-recent Art and Culture from the college library. Greenberg's modernist theories of art conflicted with Latham's belief that time had replaced space as the primary issue in painting. With the help of sculptor Barry Flanagan, then a St. Martin's student, Latham organized an event at his home during which guests chewed a third of the book's pages and spat them into a small glass flask, where they were submerged in sulphuric acid until the solution turned to sugar. Yeast was introduced and the mixture left to ferment ferment /fer·ment/ (fer-ment´) to undergo fermentation; used for the decomposition of carbohydrates. fer·ment n. 1. until, nine months later, the college library sent Latham an "urgent" overdue notice. Latham placed the liquid in a glass vial, labeled it "the essence of Greenberg," and returned it to the library. His dismissal swiftly followed. He reassembled the elements of the action in a suitcase resembling a Duchampian Boite-en-valise. The piece, retitled Art and Culture, was acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . From 1959 to 1970 Latham also made several "Skoob films," in which he attempted to shift the moving image from a spatial composition within the frame to temporal traces of movement that echoed the twenty-four-frames-per-second mechanics of film. Stop-motion shots of books opening and closing, their pages painted in different colors, demonstrated a static state transformed by movement, echoing Latham's belief that all objects were "time-based." Speak, 1962, a protopsychedelic film of animated colored disks was projected during one of Pink Floyd's early concerts at the Talbot Road Tabernacle Tabernacle (tăb`ərnăk'əl), in the Bible, the portable holy place of the Hebrews during their desert wanderings. It was a tent, like the portable tent-shrines used by ancient Semites, set up in each camp; eventually it housed the Ark and at the UFO Club on Tottenham Court Road Tottenham Court Road is a road in Central London, England, running from St Giles' Circus (the junction of Oxford Street and Charing Cross Road) north to Euston Road, near the border of the City of Westminster and the London Borough of Camden. in London. During these years Latham also produced a large body of paintings that dealt with temporality through the trace of spray-gun marks across the surface of the canvas. In some cases these works were attached to rollers hung from the wall, which exposed various parts of the canvas at different times. These led to a series of "One Second Drawings," 1970-77, each "performed" by an independent operator who sprayed the surface of small, white-painted boards with black paint. It was the specifics of this action, or "least event"--Latham's term for a moment of being, the shortest departure from a state of nothingness--rather than the physical result that gave each drawing its meaning. In 1966 Latham, his partner Barbara Steveni, and a group of artists, including Stuart Brisley and David Hall, formed the Artists Placement Group (APG APG Assists Per Game (basketball) APG Assists Per Game (hockey statistic) APG Aberdeen Proving Ground APG Automated Password Generator APG Asia Pacific Group on Money Laundering , later known as "Organization and Imagination," or O + I), which was driven by a desire to integrate artists into the social structure, working alongside politicians, scientists, engineers, and city planners. The artist, in this role, was to be known as an "incidental person," whose independent creative vision would cut through internal politics, hierarchy, and commercial interests. APG's placements managed to reach as far as the Scottish Office in Edinburgh and the British civil service Her Majesty's Civil Service is the permanent bureaucracy of Crown employees that supports UK Government Ministers. Ministers are responsible to the Sovereign and Parliament in administering the United Kingdom, but their executive decisions are implemented by civil servants, who are department in London. It was a Utopian project whose ambition remains unmatched to this day. Throughout the '70s, Latham's time-based method of to artmaking developed as a conceptual strategy whose use of language first preceded, then paralleled, that of his American counterparts. Latham's approach was rooted in the British literary tradition, as well as in the literary cut-up experiments of Alexander Trocchi, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs Noun 1. William S. Burroughs - United States writer noted for his works portraying the life of drug addicts (1914-1997) Burroughs, William Burroughs, William Seward Burroughs , all of whom moved in the same circles as Latham in London in the early '60s. The prescience pre·science n. Knowledge of actions or events before they occur; foresight. prescience Noun Formal knowledge of events before they happen [Latin praescire to know beforehand] of his linguistic strategies has often been overlooked by scholars of Conceptual art, despite the fact that language, as a conduit of knowledge, formed the core of Latham's work. In 1967, he set out his challenge to the dominance of space over time in artmaking in EVEN TSTRUCTURE, a collage of texts on board that underlined his rejection of the object as a finite entity. Latham's theories of time are complex, and incorporate elements of philosophy, science, literature, and spirituality. From the early 1970s until his death, he made diagrams elaborating his "Time Base" theory--an all-embracing structure involving cybernetics cybernetics [Gr.,=steersman], term coined by American mathematician Norbert Wiener to refer to the general analysis of control systems and communication systems in living organisms and machines. , linguistics, biology, ecology, ethics, morality, consciousness, and the breaking of the dualistic du·al·ism n. 1. The condition of being double; duality. 2. Philosophy The view that the world consists of or is explicable as two fundamental entities, such as mind and matter. 3. division between the scientific and the cosmological. This way of thinking bound Latham more to Joseph Beuys, whom he knew well, than to his more pragmatic American counterparts, and it may be one reason for his greater visibility in Europe. In 1991 I brought Latham's retrospective, organized by the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, to the Museum of Modern Art in Oxford (now called Modern Art Oxford) where I was working as Head of Exhibitions. It was the beginning of a long friendship, and a personal watershed in my own curatorial learning. During the show, I introduced Latham to the quantum philosopher Michael Lockwood. Their resulting philosophical discussion exemplified the bridges Latham was trying to build between the disciplines. For the exhibition, Latham made a new sculpture, God Is Great, 1991, in which a copy of the Bible, the Koran, and the Talmud were suspended together in a large pane of glass, symbolizing consciousness. These three ancient spiritual linchpins of "truth," both penetrating the mind and being ruptured by it, anticipated the current tensions between the West and the Middle East. Four months before the artist's death a second version of the piece was removed from Tate Britain's recent display of Latham's work, out of concern for potential offense to the Muslim community. The museum's decision provoked strong objections from the artist and the general public, who felt that the decision had worrying implications. Even toward the end of his life, Latham continued to be as provocative and thought provoking in his work as he had been at the beginning of his career. In a recent letter, Latham urged me not to lose sight of the importance of understanding the world through temporal rather than object-based structures--his belief in his own theory of EVEN TSTRUCTURE remained undiminished forty years after its invention. Latham's perception of the object as merely a representation of the transition from one state of being to another is epitomized in his comment to Nicholas Logsdail, his longtime dealer and supporter, who asked him about death a short time ago: "It's just another least event." CHRISSIE ILES IS THE ANNE AND JOEL EHRENKRANZ CURATOR OF CONTEMPORARY ART AT THE WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York City, founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. It was an outgrowth of the Whitney Studio (1914–18), the Whitney Studio Club (1918–28), and the Whitney Studio Galleries (1928–30). , NEW YORK (SEE CONTRIBUTORS.) |
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