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COLOR COMMENTARY.


If it had been possible to build the Tower of Babel without ascending it, the work would have been permitted.

Franz Kafka, Parables and Paradoxes

Spencer Finch hardly looks up as I step into his unusually tidy studio. Bent over, dabbing paint onto what seems to be a large polka-dot drawing, he blurts out a casual "Hi" as he circles his cinemascope-shaped work like a chess master scrutinizing the position of his opponent. A minute later he finally straightens up and looks at me. "You see this color here? It's the color of that chair," Finch says, pointing to a rust orange piece of furniture sitting across the studio. When I approach the work, I see that the name of something nearby has been finely penciled in around the bottom of each circle: the World Trade Center (visible through the window); the word "real" written on apiece of paper; a T-shirt (now dust rag); a book on Ad Reinhardt; wire cutters; yellowish Hellmann's mayo jar; ultramarine ultramarine, blue pigment used chiefly as a coloring material and as a bluing agent. A double silicate of sodium and aluminum with some sulfur, it is prepared commercially from kaolin, sulfur, soda ash, and other inexpensive ingredients.  pigment. The polka dots, it turns out, are the colors of the objects in the room, each circle distinct, but together a quirky, even tongue-in-cheek panorama of the artist's studio.

Nowadays, this kind of puckish puck·ish  
adj.
Mischievous; impish: a puckish grin; puckish wit.



puckish·ly adv.
 Conceptualism conceptualism, in philosophy, position taken on the problem of universals, initially by Peter Abelard in the 12th cent. Like nominalism it denied that universals exist independently of the mind, but it held that universals have an existence in the mind as concept.  may not raise a lot of eyebrows, but it does say a lot about Finch's determination to stick to his own brand of droll inventiveness. Indeed, as Artist's Studio (Theory of Relativity theory of relativity

Einstein’s contribution to the space-time relationship. [Science: NCE, 843–844]

See : Turning Point
), 2001, demonstrates, Finch has a penchant for always playful, often abstruse, and sometimes patently absurdist projects. It may also explain why he reminds one more of a stoic philosopher or a reclusive re·clu·sive  
adj.
1. Seeking or preferring seclusion or isolation.

2. Providing seclusion: a reclusive hut.
 monk than the post-Warholian rock star much more familiar in the art world today. A drawing composed of nothing more than colors and the names of their sources in the artist's studio is closer to alchemy than to a brew of Pop-Minimalism. Take the wry Forty-Eight Views of Loch Ness, 1997, which presents forty-eight unassuming photographs of the famous lake arranged in a grid. By inviting its viewers to imagine the monster they clearly are not given to see, Finch all but calls the mythical beast into being. In the slightly morbid Sky over Cape Canaveral (Challenger) ... August 12, 1994, a homemade siting device offers a view of the actual location in the sky where the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded in 1986. Then there's the batty Blue, 1996-2001, in which Finch beamed a one-second brain wave he recorded while watching the '70s television series Hawaii Five-O to Rigel, the bluest star in the sky, located 960 light-years from Earth. Transmitted in the form of a microwave capable of escaping Earth's ionosphere ionosphere (īŏn`əsfēr), series of concentric ionized layers forming part of the upper atmosphere of the earth from around 30 to 50 mi (50 to 80 km) to 250 to 370 mi (400 to 600 km) where it merges with the magnetosphere, the region , the image should arrive in, oh, about 955 years.

As these works intimate, Finch, a thirty-eight-year-old Brooklyn-based artist, has a passion for the quixotic quix·ot·ic   also quix·ot·i·cal
adj.
1. Caught up in the romance of noble deeds and the pursuit of unreachable goals; idealistic without regard to practicality.

2.
 gesture and the well-honed litotes litotes (lī`tətēz'), figure of speech in which a statement is made by indicating the negative of its opposite, e.g., "not many" meaning "a few." A form of irony, litotes is meant to emphasize by understating. Its opposite is hyperbole. . This is evinced by his continued devotion to elaborate high-wire acts of drawing, a medium he has made central to his practice. In "Up," his most recent solo exhibition in New York, at Postmasters Gallery, drawings made up close to half the works on display. The most intellectually exhilarating of these was Index of Wind, 2000, a spectacularly hard-to-make-out white-on-white drawing, on which Finch has written the names of all the winds of the world, some 437 of them. I can't resist listing some here: Boreas, Zephyr Zephyr or Zephyrus: see Eos. , Xlokk, Argestes, names drawn from classical mythology lending these natural forces the guise of subjectivity and agency in much the same way hurricanes today are dubbed Agnes or Camille. The image of wind is captured not only by the near invisibility of the white pencil but also by the visual onomotopoeia of Finch's cursive handwriting, which is as del iberate as it is unstylized. Even the show's centerpiece, a motorized mo·tor·ize  
tr.v. mo·tor·ized, mo·tor·iz·ing, mo·tor·iz·es
1. To equip with a motor.

2. To supply with motor-driven vehicles.

3. To provide with automobiles.
 contraption suspended from the ceiling that dropped apples onto a square patch of Astroturf at five-minute intervals (Composition in Red and Green, 2000), was essentially a drawing. As the apples fall, they roll in random patterns onto the green carpet, referring obliquely to Newton's epiphany at the sight of the fruit falling from a tree, but for all intents and purposes Adv. 1. for all intents and purposes - in every practical sense; "to all intents and purposes the case is closed"; "the rest are for all practical purposes useless"
for all practical purposes, to all intents and purposes
 creating a jury-rigged chaos-theory drawing.

While Composition in Red and Green may parlay the implicit tension between randomness and order into a conceptually elegant work, Finch's proclivity pro·cliv·i·ty  
n. pl. pro·cliv·i·ties
A natural propensity or inclination; predisposition. See Synonyms at predilection.



[Latin pr
 toward drawing is often governed less by an interest in physics than by a fascination with theories of color and the vagaries of our experience of it. Color provides Finch a way to get at tricky questions surrounding perception, memory, and consciousness. In the drawing Orange-Yellow (Sunset for Werner Heisenberg), 2000, for instance, Finch explores the phenomenology phenomenology, modern school of philosophy founded by Edmund Husserl. Its influence extended throughout Europe and was particularly important to the early development of existentialism.  of color without the dogmatism dog·ma·tism  
n.
Arrogant, stubborn assertion of opinion or belief.


dogmatism
1. a statement of a point of view as if it were an established fact.
2.
 of a systematic theory like that of Josef Albers or the direct visual experience offered by, say Ellsworth Kelly's shaped canvases. The drawing presents two circles: One is composed of the word "orange" scribbled in four different directions; the other is identical, only the word is "yellow." The pencil color is halfway between orange and yellow, and it is impossible to determine whether it is the former or the latter--or to delimit de·lim·it   also de·lim·i·tate
tr.v. de·lim·it·ed also de·lim·i·tat·ed, de·lim·it·ing also de·lim·i·tat·ing, de·lim·its also de·lim·i·tates
To establish the limits or boundaries of; demarcate.
 the color "yellow-orange" conceptual ly. Where precisely does orange end and yellow begin?

The question underlines the importance attributed to color not only in philosophy from the time of Plato and Aristotle but perhaps more to the point in modern art and twentieth-century phenomenology. Baudelaire, known during his lifetime as much for his art criticism as for his poetry, argued for the primacy of color over line in his early modern paeans to Delacroix: "It seems that this color, pardon me these subterfuges of language I require to explain extremely delicate ideas, thinks by itself, independently of the color of the objects it dresses." Cezanne made color the virtual basis for his understanding of form: "Form is finished when color reaches perfection," he wrote. In his recent book Chromophobia, English artist and critic David Batchelor explores how color is incompatible with the machinery of naming and conceptual determination that arose with Conceptualism in the '7os. Batchelor argues that the Pop-Minimalist aesthetics that dominate contemporary art are guilty of a fear of color, and that this guilt goes part and parcel with the greater Western cultural and philosophical inability to permit the existence of something that escapes its conceptual machinery. It is squarely in the heart of this debate that Finch's work should be understood. It spans the polarity of color and language, but without being an argument either for modernist essentialists, who see in color the basis for a renewed formalism, or for conceptualists, who are only too happy to dispense with To permit the neglect or omission of, as a form, a ceremony, an oath; to suspend the operation of, as a law; to give up, release, or do without, as services, attention, etc.; to forego; to part with
To allow by dispensation; to excuse; to exempt; to grant dispensation to or for.
 the unsightly materiality of both the plastic arts and language itself. Finch is smart enough to know this aesthetic duality is not really a matter of choice but something inherent in the very terms of modernity and its investment in aesthetic experience as a whole.

This means that Finch's understanding of color theory, in the end, doesn't amount to an alternative to formalism or Conceptualism. He is unafraid to inhabit the paradox that art exists in the play between language and perception. What many artists and theorists find unbearable, literally, the "speaking against itself" implied in para-doxa, is for Finch less something to escape than the very condition necessary for his art practice. This is why his work demonstrates a Proustian interest in the difficulties and disappointments of recollection. He knows that color lies at the boundary of what we see and what we remember. Despite the thick red line of humor that runs through his work, Finch's projects are always laced with the acute pathos of someone disappointed by both perception and language and by their mutual exclusivity and incompatibility. "There is always a paradox inherent in vision, an impossible desire to see yourself seeing. A lot of my work probes this tension: to want to see, but not being able to, " Finch says in a catalogue for a 1997 show at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, CT. Color is less a trope trope  
n.
1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor.

2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies.
 of indeterminacy in·de·ter·mi·na·cy  
n.
The state or quality of being indeterminate.

Noun 1. indeterminacy - the quality of being vague and poorly defined
indefiniteness, indefinity, indeterminateness, indetermination
 than a way to re-create an almost visceral experience of our impossible desire to name our perceptions. Color may nor belong to the domain of language, as Dave Hickey insists in a review of Batchelor's Chromophobia, but it's precisely this slippery evanescence ev·a·nesce  
intr.v. ev·a·nesced, ev·a·nesc·ing, ev·a·nesc·es
To dissipate or disappear like vapor. See Synonyms at disappear.



[Latin
 that Finch records and recounts.

The difficulty of "seeing yourself seeing," for Finch, is above all an existential experience of perception, and only secondarily an abstract idea that develops out of modern philosophy and art.

It is this palpable, experiential aspect of Finch's work that lends it both its humor and its unique tone. The artist draws on problems surrounding perception as a way to catapult his work beyond the merely formal or merely conceptual into the realm where vision, memory, and desire blend, then separate out again. In recasting a conceptual problem on a visceral level, Finch offers a narrative of perception and a talisman of how our everyday lives are defined by it. That is dearly the object lesson of the early, Don DeLillo-esque Trying to Remember the Colour of Jackie Kennedy's Pillbox Hat, 1995, a series of 100 drawings, each of which contains a specimen of pink; taken as a whole they form an absurdly impossible attempt to capture the exact shade of pink the former first lady was wearing on the day of her husband's assassination Assassination
See also Murder.

assassins

Fanatical Moslem sect that smoked hashish and murdered Crusaders (11th—12th centuries). [Islamic Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 52]

Brutus

conspirator and assassin of Julius Caesar. [Br.
. This piece simultaneously bridges and forever separates the palpable event of the eye from the remembering mind. A still more poignant version of this is Ceiling (above Freud's couc h, morning effect, 19 Berggasse, Vienna, Austria, February 18, 1994), 1995, an oval-shaped painting displaying precisely what its title says. Here, the work--a washy replica of the painted ceiling--is a cipher cipher: see cryptography.


(1) The core algorithm used to encrypt data. A cipher transforms regular data (plaintext) into a coded set of data (ciphertext) that is not reversible without a key.
 not only for our attempts to imagine what it "must have been like" to have been Freud's patient, but also for a slew of other possibilities. Was this how Freud's patients felt during their fifty minutes? Was looking up at this what triggered the patient's memories? What kind of memories does it trigger in me? Finch's conceptual sleight of hand sleight of hand
n. pl. sleights of hand
1. A trick or set of tricks performed by a juggler or magician so quickly and deftly that the manner of execution cannot be observed; legerdemain.

2.
 plays out Freud's famous image for the functioning of the psyche, the magic writing pad. According to him, the unconscious leaves traces on consciousness that are erased but are nevertheless inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 onto our psyches in the same way that lifting the paper off the popular turn-of-the-century toy erased what had been written on it, but left the impressions in the wax tablet.

Finch's inflection of aesthetic theory with subjective experience is heightened even more in the recent series "Wandering Lost upon the Mountains of our Choice," 1998. In seven glass mosaic-tile paintings, Finch presents blizzard conditions on the world's tallest and most forbidding mountains--K2, Anapurna, Mount Everest--drawing out an allegory of blindness. In these images of whiteout conditions, he plays on the contradiction between the literal surface of these works--the earthy rough-hewn tiles--and the metaphor of seeing that painting always proposes and recalls the deeper terror of blindness in the Oedipal oed·i·pal or Oed·i·pal
adj.
Of or characteristic of the Oedipus complex.
 narrative that affirms a paradox between seeing and knowing.

It is this paradoxical understanding dependent on literally blinding oneself that the title of Finch's show, "Up," may refer to. Up is, of course, not only the direction of the sky, but also the orientation in which human beings have long invested their metaphysics and religions, not to mention their art. Today, "up there" is where UFOs, aliens, antimatter antimatter: see antiparticle.
antimatter

Substance composed of elementary particles having the mass and electric charge of ordinary matter (such as electrons and protons) but for which the charge and related magnetic properties are opposite in sign.
, and darkness lie, an out-and-out contemporary cosmology that veils the terrifying ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 sublimity of deep space. It is perhaps this sublime endlessness that Sky (over Roswell, New Mexico Roswell is a city in Chaves County in the southeastern quarter of the state of New Mexico, USA. It is the county seat of Chaves County. As of the 2005 census estimate, the population was 45,199, making it New Mexico's fifth largest city. , 5/5/00, dusk), 2000, a rhinestone-studded, irregularly shaped aluminum panel, wants to remind us of but also deflate (file format, compression) deflate - A compression standard derived from LZ77; it is reportedly used in zip, gzip, PKZIP, and png, among others.

Unlike LZW, deflate compression does not use patented compression algorithms.
. Aristotle once credited looking up at the sky with the beginning of philosophy. One might add, however, that it led also to Greek astrology. It is perhaps the combination of philosophy and astrology that Finch's glittering painting evokes in a supremely self-effacing gesture. His art is the surface of everything we can't know but can clearly see--a vote, in oth er words, against the sublime and in favor of the more limited earthly pleasures of the beautiful.

Saul Anton is a writer and critic in New York. He is editor of artforum.com.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Spencer Finch
Author:ANTON, SAUL
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2001
Words:2033
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