Monday, September 10, 2012

Curator Appraising Task

In September of this month the Royal Academy of Arts will present the Mind and Spirit exhibition celebrating the works of Anish Kapoor and James Turrell. Based in Burlington House on Piccadilly, the exhibition synthesizes the works of these two world-renowned artists, highlighting their relation in personal aesthetic to that of each other. The exhibition will display ten of the artist’s most avant-garde works, acclaiming their explorations of duality; including matter and non-matter, a highly reflective series often alluding to the concept of distorted perception. 

 In this selection of key works you can encounter the powerful artworks of these two artists up close and in-depth. Highlights include Kapoor’s Svayambh,where the audience can watch the impenetrable, forty- tone block of red wax slowly squeeze past the archways within the gallery [Royal Academy of Arts: Anish Kapoor]. Others include Turrell’s The Light Inside,transcending the traditional confines of built spaces, the raised walkway guides visitors forward and gives them a sense of floating in space, while the changing cycle of illumination further invites contemplation. 

 Both Kapoor and Turrell involve spiritual dimensions within their works to suggest that the meaning is much more than just what you ‘see’. Kapoor’s artworks seek to understand what it is to be human through challenging and distorting our physical dimension through reflection, or confronting us with ambiguous and grand-scale monuments, developing immersive and sometimes unsettling experiences. Influenced by both his Indian heritage and western philosophy, Kapoor invites the audience to look past the confines of light and space, and to contemplate their place in the world through the use of parallels such as light and dark, body and mind as well as matter and spirit. His continual experimentation with structure and medium has led him to work with a variety of materials from carved stone, wax fiberglass and pigment has helped him establish his underpinning concept that something is ‘partially there’. “I think I’ve had three or four moments in my work over the last twenty-five years that have been real discoveries. The pigment pieces felt to me as if they were a discovery about an object and what an object can be; how an object can be and not be. Then, of course, the void pieces. The idea that if I empty out all the content and just make something that is an empty form, I don’t empty out the content at all. The content is there in a way that’s more surprising than if I tried to make a content” [Royal Academy of Arts: Anish Kapoor]. Such concept is shown in works such as “Sans titre” where the void appears endless, broadening into its depth, and seems to encroach upon the observer, controverting conventional concepts of space. Amusing at the sensory level, this work also has a philosophical domain, inducing observers to think about how they relate to things and about existence itself, constructing ideas and meaning relevant to that of the exhibition. This notion is in synthesis with Turrell, who works within a highly spiritual context. His forty-year exploration of light enables him to make thought-provoking and beautiful contemporary art works, primarily involving the exploration in light and space, speaking to the viewer without words to evoke an awakening within the mind. “ I want to create an atmosphere that can be consciously plumbed with seeing” says the artist, “ like the wordless thought that comes from looking in a fire” [James Turrell]. Through the manipulation of light rather than paint or sculptural material, James Turrell introduced an art that was not an object but an experience in perception, which examines the very nature of seeing. Known for his light tunnels and light projections, Turrell is able to create shapes that appear to yield weight and mass, although they are only created with light [Mattress Factory]. This process can be regarded as seeing the act of seeing, realizing the process of perception itself. ”It’s very important to me that you see it one way at first, and then it reveals itself as something else. Then you go back to see it the initial way again” [Kapoor/Turrell: Perception of Space]. The exhibition synthesizes the works of these two contemporary artists who, through using minimalism techniques, get back to the core of existence and challenge the perception of one’s self. “We live within this reality we create, and we’re quite unaware of how we create the reality. So the work is often a general koan into how we go about forming this world in which we live, in particular with seeing” [James Turrell]. Both artists use often-simplistic shapes within the works, however they explore a deeper conceptual basis, provoking an emotional response, allowing the viewer to internally reflect throughout the entire experience. 


 Location of exhibition : Royal Academy of Arts, London
As both artists need a large-scale area for their installations, I have selected to host the Mind & Spirit exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. Within the Royal Academy, the artworks of Kapoor and Turrell will be displayed spaciously throughout the exhibition, as each work can be viewed down a separate corridor. For Turrells artworks, the buildings lighting will be dimmed to allow the projections will be able to be easily viewed and appreciated to full capacity. For areas with Kapoors work, the lighting will be much the opposite. The works need to be displayed in well-lit areas to be able to clearly observe the reflections or appreciate the larger works. As both works are dealing with perception, the lighting of the exhibition becomes a prominent feature. Through manipulating the lighting, it will achieve the same effect that both artist try to display throughout their works, which is to alter the reality, in particular what we are seeing, or more importantly what we aren’t seeing until we are forced to look a little deeper. 

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 Design Aesthetic of Blog: The dark aesthetic of my blog is appropriate for the context of this exhibition. As the artists use lighting as a prominent feature within their works, I have chosen to simulate almost a dimly- lit room that is ready to be illuminated with the works of Kapoor and Turrell. The dark setting also relates to the duality concept that is evident in each artist works, in this case focusing on light and dark with the contrast in background color with the white text. 

Anish Kapoor

“Svayambh” (2007) The title of this work, Svayambh, translates from Sanskrit as ‘born by itself’ or ‘self-generated’. The sculpture takes the form of a train but one without windows, seats or passengers. It is impenetrable, a forty-ton block of red wax, paint and Vaseline, moving across the Main Galleries of the Royal Academy. It squeezes through the archways, leaving lumps of colour, thick and uncomfortable. The smell penetrates the space as we watch this awkward kinetic sculpture slowly pass by.
“Sans titre” (2008) The void appears endless, broadening into its depth, and seems to encroach upon the observer, controverting conventional concepts of space. Amusing at the sensory level, this work also has a philosophical domain, inducing observers to think about how they relate to things and about existence itself.
“Idiocy” His sculptures distort shapes and explore the empty as an idea. It is an abstract art that evidences tensions between opposites: matter and spirituality, presence and absence or density and empty.
“ Shooting in the corner” (2008/09) The work Shooting into the Corner inhabits two worlds; it is both an artifact and a performative piece of art. It will change and evolve during the exhibition, as the splattered wax on the wall gradually builds up. Kapoor is using chance and time to make a huge drawing in the corner of the gallery. He has taken great care in choosing the sort of performers he wants to execute the shooting of the cannon, by auditioning drama students. There is a stockpile of pellets that the performers systematically fire across the gallery. The artwork is not complete without the performers as they work to a ritualistic rhythm.
“Yellow” (1999) In the quoted conversation, Kapoor is considering how the eye operates when viewing one of the works by American artist Barnett Newman (fig.3). Kapoor is fascinated with the way colour and painting work in a spatial and sculptural sense. In Yellow, Kapoor has produced a hybrid between painting and sculpture; it lies in between the two worlds of each art form. The installation of this piece is complex, as it is a huge six square-metre work. It is made from fibreglass and pigment, yet its construction and materials are difficult to understand, as it hovers on the wall, drawing us nearer. Kapoor delights in making us stop and become fixated by a colour. Yellow plays with our perceptions, optically and physically, as the colour yellow has a deep-rooted effect on us.
“Untitled” One of Kapoors works dealing with distorted reflection and the way in which we view ourselves. This altered perspective is a central theme displayed though the exhibition.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

James Turrell: Gard Blue (1968-2002) This work is a Cross-Corner Projection piece, part of a series of some of the earliest light works that Turrell made. This work uses a projector to create light in a shape that seems to have weight and mass. "It is about perception, using light as a material to influence or affect the medium of perception. We live in this reality we create,and we're quite unaware of how we create the reality. So the work is often a general koan into how we go about forming this world in which we live, in particular with seeing".
James Turrell: Catso, Red (1967-1994) What appears to be a red cube in the corner of the gallery is a red square of light projected diagonally across the room. “It’s very important to me that you see it one way at first, and then it reveals itself as something else. Then you go back again and see it the initial way again.”
Turrell's installation "Alta (Pink)" as part of the "Cosmic Wonder" exhibition at San Francisco's Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in 2006:“We think of color as a thing that we're receiving. And if you go into one of the sky spaces, you can see that it's possible to change the color of the sky. Now, I obviously don't change the color of the sky, but I changed the context of vision.”
'Bridget's Bardo', Model,2009,by James Turrell
'The Light Inside"
"Skyspaces" at Turrell's alma mater Pomona College in California
'Spread' 2003 NOTES: - His art is not an object but an experience in perception, manipulating light rather than paint or sculptural material. - Works full of purity and emotional resonance - Makes light palpable