Each Rainbow Must Retain the Chromatic Signature, it. For the past 15 years Neidich has used a variety of means to explore the developmental and cultural foundations of perception, consciousness and the mind. The gallery presents 3 projects which utilize 3 different approaches, painting, installation and sculpture, to investigate the experiential variability of color perception.
magnus muller Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition of Berlin-based
American artist Warren Neidich entitled "Each Rainbow Must Retain the
Chromatic Signature, itŠ". For the past 15 years Warren Neidich has used a
variety of artistic means to explore the developmental and cultural
foundations of perception, consciousness and the mind. The gallery will
present three projects which utilize three different approaches, painting,
installation and sculpture, to investigate the experiential variability of
color perception.
Rainbow Brushes, 2007-08, consists of a series of thirteen and fifteen-inch
paintbrushes that have been made through an action the artist refers to as
"Performative Pulls". The colors found in a section of a rainbow that
appears in an already existing painting in the history of European Art are
first matched on paper with acrylic paint. For instance, the work entitled
After Peter Paul Rubens, 1636, was made from the rainbow found in Ruben's
painting Rainbow Landscape, 1636-1638. The paper is laid flat on the ground
and a brush is pulled through it, leaving its traces or afterimage on the
bristles. The brush is then hung on the wall. According to the science of
optics, a rainbow is a physical phenomenon made up of seven colors arranged
in a specific order. However, painted rainbows from different periods in art
history appear quite different as they express the varying cultural and
experiential circumstances under which they were created. These same
changing conditions are reflected in the construction of the mind of the
artist. Therefore, the representation of each rainbow is the result of the
projection of this mind upon the canvas, which acts as a screen illuminated
by that particular condition of the mind. The installation of these brushes
highlights these differences and expresses the history and cumulative
affects of cultural history on the mind as represented through the optics of
art history.
Neidich's close relationship to Los Angeles and his interest in the works of
the California Light and Space artists like James Turrell, Robert Irwin and
Maria Nordman served as the inspiration for the large sculpture installed in
the front of the gallery. Infinite Regress, 2008, is a three-sided pavilion,
each side consisting of a 3m x 2,8m steel frame upon which ready-made
automatic transparent glass sliding doors, like those found at airports and
department stores, have been attached. Each door is tinted in one of the
primary colors red, blue and yellow. The doors' opening and closing is
activated through the passing motion of visitors in the gallery whose
presence stimulates an invisible eye in this case an infrared sensor.
Visitors as actors are also encouraged to move into and through it. Their
actions and secret relations with the "work itself" endlessly EXCITE the
superimposition of the transparent colored door surfaces upon each other,
producing the secondary mixtures of violet, green, and orange. As a social
conduit, the pavilion is embedded in the tectonics of the gallery, situating
itself at the juncture of its three adjoining spaces. This relational and
performative work is primarily the result of random gestures and circulatory
patterns of the visitors inhabiting the gallery. Yet there is always the
possibility that these same visitors might form temporary alliances with
each other to create a variety of emergent colored effects and affects.
Red, White and Blue, 2000-2008, is an installation shown in the back room of
the gallery made up of three one-meter square neon paintings and a wall of
mirrors reflecting them. In False Start, 1959, Jasper Johns painted words in
colors different from the colors named. Orange is painted in white and red
is in blue. The object nature of the words is enhanced, rendering them
almost unintelligible. The first part of Red, White, Blue consists of three
painted canvases on which neon words spelling out the three colors of the
American flag are attached but here, too, the colors are not consistent with
their names. The neon for red consists of white letters and that of blue
appears in red letters. This lack of correspondence is also found in a
psychological test for attention called the Stroop Test, which takes
advantage of our ability to read words more quickly and automatically than
we can name colors. It measures a cognitive mechanism called directed
attention. A poorer performance is found in individuals with attention
deficit disorder but degrees of difficulty are also uncovered in normal
people. The chromatic experiments using colored squares in the paintings of
Joseph Albers, for instance Homage to the Square, 1965 are well known. But
can experimental art works such as these go beyond the psychological and
physiological conditions they stimulate? Surely they are imbedded in a
history of art to which they communicate, but can they have biopolitical
import. Red, White and Blue, 2000-2008 attempts to answer this question by
engaging the body in a political way and drawing awareness to the way
attention can be manipulated and information made confounding.
Warren Neidich has participated in numerous exhibitions worldwide and his
work is represented in private and public collections, including the Whitney
Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum in Los Angeles and
the Ludwig Museum in Cologne. His work will be presented in a solo show at
the Moderna Museet, Stockholm in the fall of 2008. In the past his work has
been shown internationally in such institutions as the Whitney Museum of
Art, New York City; P.S.1, MOMA, Long Island City, Ludwig Museum, Cologne;
the Walker Art Museum, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Kunsthaus Graz, Kunsthaus
Zurich, and ICA London. A collection of his writing Blow-up: Photography,
Cinema and the Brain was published by DAP in 2003. He is the recipient of
the AHRB-ACE Art Award, 2004, The Arts Council of England Merit Award, 2005
and The British Academy Award, 2005. He is currently the Visiting Artist and
Research Fellow at the Center for Cognition, Computation and Culture at
Goldsmiths College, London (2006-2008).
Opening: Thursday, April 3rd, 6pm 9pm
Magnus Muller
Weydingerstr. 10/12 - Berlin
Free admission