'Space Light Art - A Film Environment' features a new re-creation by the Center for Visual Music from Fischinger's restored original nitrate film. 'Signs & Symbols', the third in a series of six exhibitions focused on the Whitney's collection, takes stock of the period from the mid-1940s to the end of the 1950s, drawing upon the Museum's deep collection of paintings, sculpture, drawings, prints and photographs.
Oskar Fischinger
'Space Light Art - A Film Environment'
curated by Chrissie Iles
This summer, the Whitney Museum of American Art presents Oskar
Fischinger: Space Light Art – A Film Environment, on view from June 28 to October 28, 2012. The
exhibition is curated by Chrissie Iles, the Whitney’s Anne & Joel Ehrenkranz Curator, and features a
new re-creation by the Center for Visual Music from Fischinger’s restored original nitrate film.
Oskar Fischinger worked in animation, filmmaking and painting. An influential pioneer of abstract
cinema, Fischinger started his career in Weimar-era Germany during the 1920s. Working with multiple-
projector formats, he redefined abstraction during this period, with spectacular films that explore the
interplay of abstract shapes, color, and light. Inspired by the German painter Walter Ruttman and his
1921 experiments in “painting with time,” Fischinger, working along with Hungarian composer
Alexander Laszlo, first combined film and music with projections of abstract color in the mid-1920s.
The Whitney’s exhibition focuses on Fischinger’s Raumlichtkunst (Space Light Art), one of the first
multimedia projections ever made. Debuted in Germany in 1926, this multiscreen film series was
radical in format, creating, in Fischinger’s words: “an intoxication by light from a thousand sources.”
The projection format and unique combination of abstract shapes and hypnotic patterns was, as Iles
states: “decades ahead of its time, establishing Fischinger as a key figure in the history of multi-media
projective environments.”
The re-creation of Raumlichtkunst on view at the museum was first photochemically restored by the
Center for Visual Music, then recreated in high-definition from original 35mm nitrate film material.
Using modern digital processes, the restoration re-creates the rich coloration of Fischinger’s originals
from the 1920s. The projection on each screen displays layers of geometric animations echoing
Fischinger’s earliest experiments with abstract forms, including spirals and staffs, moiré patterns, and
tinted liquid patterns.
Exhibition Support
Center for Visual Music acknowledges film restoration support through the Avant-Garde Masters
program, funded by The Film Foundation, administered by The National Film Preservation Foundation.
About the Artist
Born in Gelnhausen, Germany, Oskar Fischinger (1900-1967), initially pursued a career in music,
studying violin and organ construction, before enrolling in a trade school devoted to architectural
drafting and tool design where he eventually earned an engineer’s diploma.
Moving with his family to Frankfurt, Fischinger was introduced to the work of abstract film pioneer
Walter Ruttman in 1921, and soon began to develop his first and most radical films, experimenting with
colored liquids and three dimensional structures composed of wax and clay.
Fischinger moved on to Munich and then Berlin to pursue a career as a full-time filmmaker. From this
period onward, Fischinger would alternate commercial work and his personal, experimental filmmaking.
While he preferred to work in an avant-garde direction, Fischinger’s commercial work allowed him both
the financial security and access to the latest technology on which his personal work depended. His
technical prowess and special effects work soon garnered him the name ‘The Wizard of
Friederichstrasse,’ after the location of his studio.
After the Nazi government declared all abstract films ‘degenerate,’ Fischinger found it increasingly
difficult to obtain necessary permits and moved to Hollywood to pursue his work first at Paramount and
later at MGM and Disney. Feeling constrained by the demands of the studios, Fischinger increasingly
turned to oil painting as a creative outlet, producing over eight hundred canvases, and did not receive
any funding for his personal films after 1947. In total, Fischinger produced more than fifty films.
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Signs & Symbols
Signs & Symbols, the third in a series of six
exhibitions focused on the Whitney's collection, takes stock of the
period from the mid-1940s to the end of the 1950s, drawing upon the
Museum's deep collection of paintings, sculpture, drawings, prints,
and photographs. This exhibition reconsiders this critical postwar
moment--a time perhaps most frequently associated with a select group
of Abstract Expressionists and their large-scale, highly abstract
canvases and gestural brushwork. By contrast and through a more
textured narrative, Signs & Symbols highlights primarily abstract
work completed on diverse scales, engaged with more figurative signs
and symbols, and by a larger group of artists, many of whom are
lesser known and rarely exhibited. The exhibition, curated by Donna
De Salvo, the Whitney's Chief Curator and Deputy Director for
Programs, in collaboration with Jane Panetta, opens on June 28 and
remains on view through October 28 in the Mildred & Herbert Lee
Galleries on the Whitney's second floor.
Donna De Salvo comments: "The postwar period that Signs & Symbols
makes its subject has become so identified with the heroic
abstraction of New York School painting that it's easy to overlook
the broader, more nuanced investigations into representation and
abstraction that occupied artists throughout the country at the time.
The Whitney's collection is wonderfully rich in these experiments as
they play out nationally. And from the vantage of 2012, the range and
variety of abstractions mediated by figurative signs and symbols
takes on a new order of interest."
While key canonized Abstract Expressionists play an essential part in
the exhibition (often represented by atypical examples of their
work), among them Jackson Pollock, Adolph Gottlieb, Lee Krasner,
Robert Motherwell, Richard Pousette-Dart, Barnett Newman, Franz
Kline, and Mark Rothko, the show's scope extends to the work of
artists less immediately associated with the period such as Ivan Le
Lorraine Albright, Will Barnet, Forrest Bess, Byron Browne, Dorothy
Dehner, Herbert Ferber, Ellwood Graham, Morris Graves, David Hare,
John Ward Lockwood, Boris Margo, Alice Trumbull Mason, Alfonso
Ossorio, Anne Ryan, Charles Seliger, Theodoros Stamos, Richard
Stankiewicz, Mark Tobey, Bradley Walker Tomlin, Hugh Townley, and
Steve Wheeler.
In considering the nature of this work, the exhibition presents
examples indebted to a range of diverse influences, including Native
American art, the role of mythic imagery, Eastern calligraphy, and
the surrounding natural world. These influences worked to establish a
new national aesthetic imbued with universal meaning that attempted
to move beyond European Cubism and Surrealism. To achieve this, many
of the artists presented here utilized highly personal and symbolic
systems as the formal basis for their work--whether through
calligraphic marks, pictograms, invented languages, or symbolic forms
functioning as referential markers.
For example, the installation includes artists such as Morris Graves,
Norman Lewis, Charles Seliger, and Mark Tobey--abstract artists often
sidelined in this narrative despite having made calligraphic and
highly symbolic work related to notions of a universal unconscious.
Artists such as Adolph Gottlieb and Bradley Walker Tomlin explicitly
utilized pictograms and calligraphic mark-making as an alternative to
representation, striving to establish an alternative vocabulary for
abstraction. The show also highlights Indian Space painters such as
Will Barnet and Steve Wheeler--artists whose all-over compositions
were inspired by the flatness and geometric characteristics present
in Native American art. Ultimately, these varied investigations
contributed an important foundation for the next generation of
artists that emerged in the late 1950s and early 1960s; Jasper Johns
and Roy Lichtenstein, also included in the exhibition, readily
embraced distinctly American subjects while similarly incorporating
highly individualized systems of signs and symbols into their work.
This is the third in a multiyear series of six shows reassessing the
Whitney's collection in anticipation of the Museum's move downtown in
2015. The earlier exhibitions were Breaking Ground: The Whitney's
Founding Collection and Real/Surreal. The fourth in the series is
Sinister Pop, which opens on November 15, 2012. Exhibition Support
Ongoing support for the permanent collection and major support for
Signs & Symbols is provided by Bank of America.
About the Whitney
The Whitney Museum of American Art is the world’s leading museum of twentieth-century and contemporary art
of the United States. Focusing particularly on works by living artists, the Whitney is celebrated for presenting
important exhibitions and for its renowned collection, which comprises over 19,000 works by more than 2,900
artists. With a history of exhibiting the most promising and influential artists and provoking intense debate, the
Whitney Biennial, the Museum's signature exhibition, has become the most important survey of the state of
contemporary art in the United States. In addition to its landmark exhibitions, the Museum is known
internationally for events and educational programs of exceptional significance and as a center for research,
scholarship, and conservation.
Founded by sculptor and arts patron Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney in 1930, the Whitney was first housed on West
8th Street in Greenwich Village. The Museum relocated in 1954 to West 54th Street and, in 1966, inaugurated its
present home, designed by Marcel Breuer, at 945 Madison Avenue on the Upper East Side. While its vibrant
program of exhibitions and events continues uptown, the Whitney is moving forward with a new building project,
designed by Renzo Piano, in downtown Manhattan. Located at the corner of Gansevoort and Washington Streets
in the Meatpacking District, at the southern entrance to the High Line, the new building, which has generated
immense momentum and support, will enable the Whitney to vastly increase the size and scope of its exhibition
and programming space. Ground was broken on the new building in May 2011, and it is projected to open to the
public in 2015.
Current and Upcoming Exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art
Yayoi Kusama’s Fireflies on the Water Opens June 13, 2012
Sharon Hayes June 21-September 9, 2012
Signs & Symbols June 28-October 28, 2012
Oskar Fischinger June 28-October 28, 2012
Yayoi Kusama July 12-September 30, 2012
Whitney Museum Press Office:
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Tel: (212) 570-3633 pressoffice@whitney.org
Opening 28 june
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