James Turrell: PaceWildenstein, New York.Since 1966, when he transformed his Santa Monica Santa Monica (săn`tə mŏn`ĭkə), city (1990 pop. 86,905), Los Angeles co., S Calif., on Santa Monica Bay; inc. 1886. Tourism and retailing are important, and the city has motion-picture, biotechnology, and software industries. studio into an artwork by meticulously arranging natural and artificial light sources, James Turrell James Turrell (born 1943, Los Angeles) is an artist primarily concerned with light and space. He is best known for his work in progress, Roden Crater. Located outside Flagstaff, Arizona, Turrell is turning this natural cinder volcanic crater into a massive naked-eye has made works composed almost exclusively of light cast on, around, and into architectural spaces: open-air rooms for viewing the changing sky, darkened dark·en v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens v.tr. 1. a. To make dark or darker. b. To give a darker hue to. 2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy. 3. spaces into which light emanates through window-like apertures, and large-scale walk-in environments. Descriptions of these works generally oscillate To swing back and forth between the minimum and maximum values. An oscillation is one cycle, typically one complete wave in an alternating frequency. between metaphysical references, in which Turrell's use of light is seen in terms of Platonic, supranatural illumination of eternal truths, and a uniquely American nostalgia in which his vision is tied to the iconic desert vistas of the Southwest, where he now makes his home. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Turrell, however, his art does not represent--rather, it stands only for itself, for light in its own right, and is, in turn, less about what lies before our eyes than what is behind them. He is concerned, he has said, with the primal conditions of seeing and the limits of perception; and if there are reference points for Turrell, they range from the celestial viewing structures of ancient civilizations to the works of Monet, Seurat, and Rothko, as well as Robert Irwin Robert Irwin may be:
Turrell recently constructed two new works at the PaceWildenstein gallery, his first show 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 since 1998. One, First Moment (all works 2003), belongs to a series of installations sharing the name "Ganzfeld ganzfeld (gyanzˑ·f n " (Total Field), 1976-, a German scientific term for a uniform environment created for psycho-perceptual experimentation in which subjects are deprived of sensory stimuli. From a distance, this Ganzfeld appeared to be a large, blue-lit screen set into the center of a gallery wall; after mounting a carpeted stair, viewers found they could step within and enter a kind of glowing cave (unfortunately only after donning noisy plastic booties). This step from the platform into the gently sloping interior space felt like one of those B-movie moments when, to allow passage from one dimension to another, an apparently solid wall dissolves. Visitors seemed delightfully disarmed by a sense that, instead of moving farther into the gallery, they were escaping it entirely. The perfect illusion that conceals its own methods is rare in contemporary art. Unlike cinema, installation art tends to make its workings visible, offering some reflection on how it manipulates audiences. Turrell's pieces, however, offer only effect. The works in this exhibition direct us to light and space and de-emphasize everything else, including bulbs, walls, and wiring. (As the artist has said: "I want you to see the swan as it glides across the lake, not the fact that underneath it's paddling like hell.") Yet these seamless, minimal works still manage to provide a somehow antispectacular experience. Inside First Moment the act of looking became a reflexive one. One didn't merely perceive light and darkness; volume and dimension themselves receded, leaving a space without measurement, a vacuum of open expectancy in which one was able to observe one's own heightened senses. Beyond questions of representation, this is Turrell's central move, as compelling now as it was in his first forays into light works some forty years ago: to reveal not the mechanisms of installation but the mechanisms of sight. In the process, he points us toward the sublime. For all this reflexivity, however, the piece still does remind one of the sky--which, while perhaps not the subject of his work per se, certainly provides crucial inspiration. (On this note, Turrell has had decades of experience as a pilot and continues to develop Roden Crater, a volcano in the Arizona desert from inside of which one can view the heavens.) The sky's depth and mutability mu·ta·ble adj. 1. a. Capable of or subject to change or alteration. b. Prone to frequent change; inconstant: mutable weather patterns. 2. in particular came to mind when entering the second piece on view here, titled Dinnebito after a town in Arizona's Black Mesa Black Mesa can have different meanings: Real World
See also: Solid cycling slowly through gradations of green, blue, and red. Try to touch it and your hand passed through and beyond, in an experience similar to stepping into First Moment. Upon inspection, it became clear that a rectangular section had been removed from the wall, and hidden lights illuminated the compartment within, which, lacking seams or shadows, appeared dimensionless. The shift of hues in Dinnebito's light window--so slow as to be perceptible only over the course of a half hour or so--easily seems a restaging of the transition from night to dawn in the desert sky. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] With their understated sense of discovery, Turrell's new projects were almost perversely complemented by Chelsea's sensory overload. Among rows of gallery-filled streets, what could be better than to stumble into a dim daydream in which you're left with only the mystery of your own perception? But, taking a more general context into consideration, perhaps it's even more compelling to consider Turrell's calculated illusionism illusionism, in art, a kind of visual trickery in which painted forms seem to be real. It is sometimes called trompe l'oeil [Fr.,=fool the eye]. The development of one-point perspective in the Renaissance advanced illusionist technique immeasurably. in terms of today's grand-scale artworks. Consider First Moment and Dinnebito alongside, say, Olafur Eliasson's spectacular Weather Project, 2003--another light-based work--at London's Tate Modern, where the illusion dictates what you see (and you will see a sun). In its subsequent resemblance to a crowded beach, the Tate's Turbine Hall reinforces Eliasson's illusion; but in a room where no more than three visitors are allowed--as in Turrell's First Moment--the individual's uncertainty is brought to the fore. Carefully controlled perceptual environments, Turrell's works nevertheless remain intimate, since they never resolve themselves. Instead, they set in motion for the viewer an experiential process that continuously unfolds with an unhurried sense of tension. New York-based writer Bettina Funcke is an editor at Dia Art Foundation Dia Art Foundation, American foundation that supports contemporary art and artists, est. 1974 by art dealer Heiner Friedrich and his wife, art patron Philippa de Menil. . |
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