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Mario Sala: Galerie Erika and Otto Friedrich.


In Mario Sala's images, the window, painting's old paradigm, opens onto doors, which close off passages to illusionary space at the same time as they evoke it. The viewer stands, repeatedly, at a threshold. We find ourselves, for example, on the outside in a painting like Draussen (Outside; all works 2003); facing a western facade by night in Westfassade bei Nacht; or at the back entrance in Hintereingang.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Sala's imaginary architecture composes a frame for branching narratives not unlike Mark Manders's long-term project "Self-portrait as a Building," 1986-. But Sala, unlike Manders, is not sketching a self-portrait; rather, these are public spaces, fundamental forms of orientation in space, which, with the most intensely condensed con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 elements of passageways and alleys, are always narrated differently. As if one were a night watchman WATCHMAN. An officer in many cities and towns, whose duty it is to watch during the night and take care of the property of the inhabitants.
     2. He possesses generally the common law authority of a constable (q.v.
 moving through a recently vacated building, opening doors and then closing them behind oneself again, in these images small universes reveal themselves for a few seconds and can be grasped only momentarily and in fragments. With a kind of hyperreal Hyperreal may refer to:
  • Hyperreality, a term used in semiotics and postmodern philosophy
  • Hyperrealism, a school of painting
  • Hyperreal numbers, an extension of the real numbers in mathematics that are used in non-standard analysis
 compression, Sala integrates the most minute details--the ornamental, the insignificant, the almost imperceptible im·per·cep·ti·ble  
adj.
1. Impossible or difficult to perceive by the mind or senses: an imperceptible drop in temperature.

2.
, even aromas insofar in·so·far  
adv.
To such an extent.

Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice
 as they can be captured in unusually bright color constellations.

Sala's painted image-forms, all on bent aluminum sheets, are highly concentrated moments of awakening in the actual, pools in the perpetual stream of consciousness. Digital prints scanned from the artist's archive offer the point of departure for swift, very free painting rich in ornament. Mixtures of glue, watercolor, and oil paint, often applied in thick layers, augment the sensuous sen·su·ous  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or derived from the senses.

2. Appealing to or gratifying the senses.

3.
a. Readily affected through the senses.

b.
 presence of the panel until it forms a relief. The consciously chosen elements of collage--photographs or paper with wallpaper-like patterns--are carried through by the painting, intensified and disintegrated, sometimes almost destroyed, only in order to uncover spaces in yet another way. Construction and deconstruction deconstruction, in linguistics, philosophy, and literary theory, the exposure and undermining of the metaphysical assumptions involved in systematic attempts to ground knowledge, especially in academic disciplines such as structuralism and semiotics.  do not stand in opposition to one another; they condition each other reciprocally. Publicly available image sources are sampled in a very personal order. Their reproducibility is not suspended by the superimposition In graphics, superimposition is the placement of an image or video on top of an already-existing image or video, usually to add to the overall image effect, but also sometimes to conceal something (such as when a different face is superimposed over the original face in a  of painting, only circumscribed circumscribed /cir·cum·scribed/ (serk´um-skribd) bounded or limited; confined to a limited space.

cir·cum·scribed
adj.
Bounded by a line; limited or confined.
.

Where floor meets wall, where wall meets ceiling, the third dimension makes itself visible and is immediately put into question again by the repeated patterns of the painting. Here, as in another show this year, at the Galerie Arts Futura in Zurich, Sala's images ultimately combined to form a comprehensive staging of architectonic ar·chi·tec·ton·ic   also ar·chi·tec·ton·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to architecture or design.

2. Having qualities, such as design and structure, that are characteristic of architecture:
 spaces in which even the line between ceiling and wall could be accentuated by a small, sculptural work. Whether in his installations or on the surfaces of his image-forms, the spaces in Sala's works are no longer the anonymous, purely atmospheric lounges he painted in the '90s. Now a very personal architecture unfolds between interior and exterior space. He titled a series of design sketches, shown at the Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Switzerland, in 2001, "Schwimmkanale fur Innenraume" (Swimming Channels for Interior Spaces), 1998-2001. The complex perspectival constructs are meant to be flooded, so that they can be traversed, swimming, without touching the floor but also exactly at eye level. Chilling out in space has been followed by a movement through shifting worlds.

--Hans Rudolf Reust

Translated from German by Diana Reese.
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Title Annotation:Basel
Author:Reust, Hans Rudolf
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EXSI
Date:Sep 1, 2004
Words:520
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