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Exhibition at Program,
Berlin
Rodney LaTourelle’s latest exhibition, an immersive, site specific
installation titled, In the Absence of Unambiguous Criteria (2007), takes
the viewer through a maze-like construction of three interlinked, striped
corridors, each containing a small one-person cell of saturated colour.
LaTourelle sets up a participatory mise-en-scène for people to
actively navigate his matriuschka-like spaces of colour fields, transforming
the typical disembodied aesthetic space of the gallery into a field of
direct experience. One cannot simply gaze at a safe, intellectual distance,
but must wander and slip through his sometimes narrow passageways enveloped
in varying, rhythmic colour worlds.
Three corridors, each with their
own distinct colour theme and extending across the room from the street
level windows of Program’s project space, create a juxtaposition
of natural and artificial light. The colours oscillate between the reduced
extremes of natural landscapes—the bright purple and light yellow
of the sunset; the apple green and light blue of the lily pond, and the
cold silver and white scheme of the arctic—to set up a total environment
of chromatic relationships nestled somewhere between Goethean logic and
the tones related to the body’s chakra system. Exploring the interactive
experience of the kinetic body, the installation could be described as
a haptic surface, or rather a surface exploded into a three dimensional
envelope. Through pure visceral intensity, the work becomes a space of
proposition, inviting the participant to perform within and throughout
its nested volumes.
The hybrid universe proposed by LaTourelle—between
architecture and abstract painting—diffuses the formal elements
of both traditions, and in so doing, collapses the conventional distinctions
between inside and outside, figure and ground. As you slip through the
narrow entrance, past the unfinished, raw exterior of the structure,
you are immersed into a kind of trompe d’oeil cosmos where surfaces
take on volumetric proportions; appearing as undulating three-dimensional
stripes. The flood of bright white light emanating from small adjacent
cell-like rooms, act as energy incubators, with concentrated variations
of high gloss pinkish-magenta creating orgasmic centers of meditation—a
place to literally re-charge oneself in the midst of modulated coloured
light. The slender passageways which zigzag between corridors blend in
with the rhythm of the stripes, maintaining an illusion: that of the
continuity of a closed form. It is an effect rendered visible only through
movement—of one’s own body or through the surprise penetration
of the “surface” by another person in the space. Illusion
on the corporeal scale, here, creates an atmosphere of child-like discovery
on the part of the audience, playfully intervening in, and transforming
the Modernist desire to project painting into space.
By activating visitors
to the exhibition in a direct, kinetic fashion LaTourelle, draws upon
the ethical tradition of the Brazilian Neoconcretists for whom meaning
was found in viewer participation and not in an artworks’ visual
form. Through experiments with the liberation of painting from the frame,
the Neoconcretists established an aesthetic of embodiment. By creating
a sense of wonder that precedes the scientific determination of form,
time, colour and space, they fostered elemental encounters with objects
in the world1. In the Absence of Unambiguous Criteria furthers this aesthetic
of embodiment by establishing an ephemeral and shifting sense of an interwoven
landscape that is combined with unexpected colour associations in order
to establish spatial transitions and pulsating rhythms of reflection.
Provoking connections between the mind/body and space/time of pure sensation,
the liminal nature of the work liberates the spectator beyond representation.
Seeming dualities find a space to re-fold themselves into a complex amalgam
of experiential encounter.
Raw and unfinished, the visible presence of
the orthogonal structure within the gallery creates a contrast between
the exterior surface and support and the sensual and luminous landscapes
of the interior space(s). The perfect geometrical spacing and precision
of the two-toned painted worlds are notable in our wholly imprecise,
non-repeatable, fleeting experience of them and the atmospheres they
evoke. The modulation of space enacted by the installation allows us
to cultivate our own rather anthroposophic-like apprehension of the space(s) —we
can tune out our spatial expectations and conscientiously delve into
primordial intuition, opening up a new awareness of our relationship
to our surroundings, but perhaps more importantly to our own emotional
logic. LaTourelle manages to whimsically untie us, for a moment, from
our reductive, analytical ways through a spatial/ perceptual estrangement
of the senses.
In reviving the rather forgotten connection of early European
abstract artists to esoteric thought, In the Absence of Unambiguous Criteria
stages for us, the performers, a kind of return of colour as culture
to the body. In so doing the work instigates a line of questioning concerning
the current implications of this cultural legacy vis-à-vis the
perceptions of the body and its capacity for enactment and reception.
How can one be receptive with the body, and how are such receptions learned
through the body? It is said that Annie Besant, a late 19th Century mystic
and member of the Theosophical Society, could see coloured shapes radiating
from the body—for her colour was connected to our interior, to
the billions of atoms that comprise us, intrinsic and expressive of our
corporeal/ethereal selves. LaTourelle’s installation harnesses
these unknown and perhaps unknowable qualities of the lived, and extends
this possibility outwards. His gesture seeks to free us from preconceived
perceptions, where our forgotten, stolen colours have been returned and
released back to us.
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1. Tactile dematerialization, sensory politics: Helio Oiticica's Parangoles
Art Journal, Summer, 2004 by Anna Dezeuze | http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0425/is_2_63/ai_n6155498/pg_1
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