Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,674,088 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Taiji Matsue: Vangi Sculpture Garden Museum.


Going to the opposite extreme from the blurry vision of Daido Moriyama, his primary influence, Taiji Matsue asserts relentless visibility, dissolving perspective in the glare of sharp outlines and in the accumulation of self-assertive details, to convey a new kind of anti-humanist vision. Matsue's conceptual attitude is most evident in his black-and-white work. Photographed with a 4x5 camera, uninhabited fields and mountainsides, sprinkled with trees and rocks, appear as flat picture planes covered with tiny dots or sharp lines. With homogeneous intensity, each dot or line calls for special attention, breaking down a hierarchy between center and periphery. At the same time, the repetition of similar forms creates an evocative rhythm. In texture resembling drawings or etchings, the photos convey a sense of process and tactility. The effect is comparable to the experience of what Anton Ehrenzweig called "de-differentiation," a term that Robert Smithson Robert Smithson (January 2, 1938–July 20, 1973) was an American artist famous for his land art.

Smithson was born in Passaic, New Jersey and studied painting and drawing in New York City at the Art Students League.
 used in his 1968 essay "A Sedimentation sedimentation

In geology, the process of deposition of a solid material from a state of suspension or solution in a fluid (usually air or water). Broadly defined it also includes deposits from glacial ice and materials collected under the effect of gravity alone, as in talus
 of the Mind: Earth Projects" to describe "an artistic method that captures the mind in the 'primary process' of making contact with matter."

At Vangi Sculpture Garden A sculpture garden is an outdoor garden dedicated to the presentation of sculpture, usually several permanently-sited works in durable materials in landscaped surroundings.  Museum, along with the black-and-white photographs from the series "Gazetteer gazetteer (găz'ĭtēr`), dictionary or encyclopedia listing alphabetically the names of places, political divisions, and physical features of the earth and giving some information about each. ," 1989-, and "CC," 2001-, selected photos from Matsue's new color series, "JP-22," were shown: A photo of a sandy estuary looks like a gigantic brushstroke in an Abstract Expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism  
n.
A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences.



ex·pres
 painting; a gold area peering through the silver sprawl of rugged lines against the dark background also recalls flowing patterns on a ceramic cup. Still, the tiny blue cars parked in the sand stand out with a volume and clarity that suggests solidity so·lid·i·ty  
n.
1. The condition or property of being solid.

2. Soundness of mind, moral character, or finances.

Noun 1.
, reasserting the documentary function of photography against the pictorial reduction of the landscape. "JP-22," taken in Shizuoka Prefecture in the fall of 2005, carries further Matsue's ambiguous representation of landscape as an organism beyond human design, albeit one heavily marked by the effects of human intervention. Shot from the air, the new photos capture the flow of geometrical forms latent in nature and in the functional environment, to suggest a feeling of commanding at once a microscopic perception of phenomena and a macroscopic macroscopic /mac·ro·scop·ic/ (mak?ro-skop´ik) gross (2).

mac·ro·scop·ic or mac·ro·scop·i·cal
adj.
1. Large enough to be perceived or examined by the unaided eye.

2.
 grasp of a hidden pattern in geography. The effect of colors in articulating Matsue's conceptual purpose is strongly felt. In articulating the relation between minute detail and the allover pattern, colors are used as the indices of difference, presenting what Smithson called "a grit in the vanishing point."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In many of the "JP-22" photos, roads, fields, and buildings are reduced to geometrical designs or lines on the map; the piquant colors, applied to insignificant details scattered in the flat picture plane, create points of entry for multiple perspectives. The precise depiction of details also evokes the memory of physical texture. The aerial photos of an early autumn mountaintop moun·tain·top  
n.
The summit of a mountain.
, covered with trees whose leaves appear as a dense accumulation of minute folds, suggesting at once fish scales and broccoli heads, convey the tactility of painterly paint·er·ly  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic.

2.
a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting.

b.
 texture. Adhering to photography's basic function of recording facts, Matsue's images reveal something in the landscape that escapes the limits of ordinary vision. Indeed, he uses the camera to enlarge the capacity of human perception to encounter the vicissitudes vicissitudes
Noun, pl

changes in circumstance or fortune [Latin vicis change]

vicissitudes nplvicisitudes fpl; peripecias fpl 
 of the world outside it.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Matsui, Midori
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2006
Words:523
Previous Article:Anthony McCall: Peer / Peer at the Round Chapel.
Next Article:Correction.(Correction notice)
Topics:



Related Articles
Notes from the field.
Ca d'Zan & Mable's Rose Garden.
VALLEY OF THE SCULPTURES.(News)
Robert Gumbiner.(Museum of Latin American Art honours chairman of FHP International)(Brief article)
Hiroshi Sugimoto: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC.
Massachusetts Attractions the Springfield Museums

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles