SUSA TEMPLIN.The history of mankind is manifest in its architecture--houses, temples, streets, markets, parks, and graves. It is a story that is continually being built, seen, and told anew. With her recent exhibition, "3 Feet 6 Inches Deep," Susa Templin contributes her own chapter to this narrative with a watery wa·ter·y adj. 1. Filled with, consisting of, or soaked with water; wet or soggy. 2. Secreting or discharging water or watery fluid, especially as a symptom of disease. vision of the city. Templin's photo collages, small models, and fleeting sketches propose a Manhattan filled with water. This seems appropriate on one level, because her work itself might be described as fluid, osmotic osmotic, adj pertaining to osmosis. osmotic pressure, n See pressure, osmotic. osmotic emanating from or pertaining to the pressure of osmosis. , and dynamic, all qualities that she imagines for the architecture of the future--as such titles as City proposals, Space available, and Underwater make clear. "Fluid architecture" is a utopian aesthetic that for the moment finds expression principally in video art and at times, allusively al·lu·sive adj. Containing or characterized by indirect references: an allusive speech. al·lu , in real buildings. In Templin's work, fluidity becomes a material reality, as water is converted into an architectural element of equal value to the static components--cement sidewalks, brick buildings--of 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 neighborhoods. Although the work was not included in the show, Templin's 1998 drawing, A pool is negative-architecture, might be seen as explanatory of its underlying logic: Templin's primary interest appears to be in bright blue swimming pools, their four cornered spaces lifted out of the ground and placed upright in urban settings. Sometimes full, sometimes waterless, these pools are found in numerous collages; even empty, in their contrast to the surrounding buildings, they form metaphoric collecting pools for a new architecture. In other collages of the city, Templin inserts a fragment of an image of pool water on which she has sketched a rectangular prism. These blue transparent boxes sit at intersections or rise out of the construction sites between skyscrapers. Bubbles from an untraceable source have formed on their surfaces. Hermetically her·met·ic also her·met·i·cal adj. 1. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air. 2. Impervious to outside interference or influence: sealed yet seemingly boundless, Templin's idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. "fountains" are typical of her work, an integral part of her amusing visual attempts to bring the element of water into the city via sketches and architectural models An architectural model is a tangible representation of a structure (typically a scale model) built to communicate design ideas to clients, owners, committees, customers, and the general public. . Visitors were invited to experience what it might be like to actually move through fluid architecture with Room, 1999, an underwater photographic image printed on five strips of Mylar that covered an entire wall of the gallery. The sputtering A popular method for adhering thin films onto a substrate. Sputtering is done by bombarding a target material with a charged gas (typically argon) which releases atoms in the target that coats the nearby substrate. It all takes place inside a magnetron vacuum chamber under low pressure. bubbles in blue water transformed the exhibition space into a virtual aquarium, while a foot dangling in the water seemed to suggest a kind of grounded weightlessness--a state that might ideally take place more in thought and perception than in reality. --Wolf Jahn Translated from German by Elizabeth Felicella. |
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