Knut Henrik Henriksen: Standard.Knut Henrik Henriksen's show took as its inspiration a meeting between Le Corbusier Le Corbusier (lə kôrbüzyā`), pseud. of Charles Édouard Jeanneret (shärl ādwär` zhänərā`), 1887–1965, French architect, b. La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. and Albert Einstein that transpired in 1942. The architect availed himself of the opportunity to explain his work on the Modulor system, an attempt to locate the golden section proportional to the height of the average person. The human body could thus become the pivotal point of built space, promising an ideal basis for commodious com·mo·di·ous adj. 1. Spacious; roomy. See Synonyms at spacious. 2. Archaic Suitable; handy. [Middle English, convenient, from Medieval Latin , harmonic, universally standardized edifices. Einstein responded that if realized, the Modulor would make "the bad difficult and the good easy." In his sculptures and installations, Henriksen often indulges a fascination with endlessly reproducible structures, even if only as models. Instead of master narratives, he offers material and formal displacements in which the malleability of space can be perceived viscerally rather than logically. Implementing Le Corbusier's quest for Verb 1. quest for - go in search of or hunt for; "pursue a hobby" quest after, go after, pursue look for, search, seek - try to locate or discover, or try to establish the existence of; "The police are searching for clues"; "They are searching for the a universal standard, Scale of Proportions Which Makes the Bad Difficult and the Good Easy, 2006, is an intervention in the gallery space, lowering its ceiling height to the French architect's paradigmatic See paradigm. 7' 4 3/4". The new ceiling--consisting of square white grooved Styrofoam panels mounted on a prosaic wooden frame--is in effect a horizontal sculpture that you look at from below. It is the exhibition's only work, a sort of Bauhaus-meets-Home Depot gesture: Henriksen's use of cheap standard materials from DIY DIY abbr. do-it-yourself DIY or d.i.y. Brit, Austral & NZ do-it-yourself DIY abbr DIY do it yourself a DIY shop/job. shops injects the whole scenario with an inescapable sense of the economy and sensations of everyday life. As one stands in the gallery, the new drop ceiling feels more like an amputation amputation (ăm'pyətā`shən), removal of all or part of a limb or other body part. Although amputation has been practiced for centuries, the development of sophisticated techniques for treatment and prevention of infection has greatly of the space or a piston coming down on your head than a divine proportion Divine Proportion: see Golden Section. , and it seems to squeeze your attention from the empty white cube out toward the street life ho-humming past the windows. So while the work does what Minimalist sculpture does best--namely, enhances a sense of scale, material, and perception by means of a kind of elated banality--it at the same time debunks or evades the mystique and sublimity of Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts . Seemingly true to Le Corbusier's humanist intentions, the beholder becomes the protagonist in the transformed void of the gallery space. However, the paradox is that you find yourself in a place where objects are usually the focus, and instead of mastering the central perspective you become a pawn in a game of transparency turned opaque. Scale of Proportions is also a spoof on the metaphysical overtones of heroic modernism. From the outside at night, one can see how the space created above the drop ceiling makes for a kind of Platonic realm lit up by strip lights, while the lower part--the gallery space--wallows in darkness. This sharp divide between the realm of ideas and the material world is probably akin to the tristesse that confronted the inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. of many twentieth-century machines for living as they started to fall apart and became socially compromised housing projects. Teetering between function and dysfunction, aesthetics and morality, play and construction, Henriksen's works are meditations on how little it often takes to reconstruct or reimagine a corner of the world anew--or to put it out of whack. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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