Series and Progressions. Curated by Tiffany Bell, this exhibition will examine Flavin's use of progressions and serial structures, ideas that were central to the artist's practice throughout his career. Flavin has been credited with being 'one of the first artists to make use of a basically progressional procedure'. On view will be the nominal three (to William of Ockham), 1963, an installation that was of seminal importance to the his body of work.
Curated by Tiffany Bell
David Zwirner is pleased to present Dan Flavin: Series and
Progressions, the first exhibition of the artist’s work at the gallery since
having announced its representation of the Estate of Dan Flavin.
From 1963, when he conceived the diagonal of May 25, 1963 (to
Constantin Brancusi), a single gold, fluorescent lamp that hangs on a
diagonal on the wall—a work which marks the artist’s first use of
fluorescent light alone, until his death in 1996, Flavin produced a
singularly consistent and prodigious body of work that utilized
commercially-available fluorescent lamps to create installations of
light and color.
Curated by Tiffany Bell, this exhibition will examine Flavin’s use of
progressions and serial structures, ideas that were central to the
artist’s practice throughout his career. Flavin has been credited with
being “one of the first artists to make use of a basically progressional
procedure, ”1 and the systematic arrangement of color and light
fixtures was an aspect of his work that not only led to it being
characterized as Minimal art but which moreover influenced
Conceptual artistic practices.
On view will be the nominal three (to William of Ockham), 1963, an
installation that was of seminal importance to the artist’s body of
work, in that it was the first work by Flavin to explore a systematic
procedure. Here, Flavin has extended the primary unit of fluorescent
light into a serial, additive system that consists of six fluorescent lamps
(in three vertical sets, grouped as one, two, and three lamps). As Michael Govan explains, the nominal three “is at the
crux of Flavin’s emerging practice. The vertically-oriented single fixture in white, known as one [according to a
drawing by the artist], must have been considered a reduction to the simplest of formulations. Yet Flavin’s final
resolution involved three sets of lights, a series rather than a consolidated whole, which realized the possibilities implicit
in the first diagonal—that it could be extended endlessly.... the nominal three was not a fixed composition, but rather
a concept—whose premise had enormous implications for a form of art that could be drawn out from an idea.”2 The
work is dedicated to the Medieval English theologian and philosopher known for expounding the methodological
principle (“Ockham’s Razor”) of forming a hypothesis based on the most concise means possible.
Flavin would continue to explore themes of seriality in a number of key works, including his “barriers,” which literally
extend the notion of potentially endless repeatability into the exhibition space. The exhibition will include untitled (to
Helga and Carlo, with respect and affection), 1974, a work configured in a modular sequence of square units that
dramatically bathes the surrounding space in blue light. Here, the artist has constructed a fence-like structure of
fluorescent lamps that cuts across the length of a room and disrupts the surrounding architecture. Part of a series of
four related “barriers” (created in blue, pink, yellow, and green), this work has not been exhibited since it was first on
view in 1975 in a solo presentation of Flavin’s work at the Kunsthalle Basel (fünf Installationen in fluoreszierendem Licht
von Dan Flavin); the dedication is to Carlo Huber, who was the director of the Kunsthalle Basel, and his wife Helga.
Filling one of the galleries at David Zwirner (the 519 West 19th Street space) will be a large-scale work that Flavin
originally created for his first solo museum exhibition. In 1967, the artist devised an arithmetically expanding system of
8-foot lamps that were placed vertically along the available gallery walls of the Museum of Contemporary Art,
Chicago. Titled alternating pink and “gold,” the installation was comprised of alternating units of pink and gold
fluorescent light, installed at progressively larger intervals from one another, beginning at the center of each wall: two
lamps (one pink, one yellow) were placed at the mid-point of each wall; then single lamps of alternating colors were
placed on both sides of the pair, spaced at intervals of 2 feet, 4 feet, 6 feet, etc. – as many times as space allowed.
The recreation at David Zwirner presents one of the earliest examples of installation art: encompassing all available
walls of the gallery, alternating pink and “gold” produces an immersive, site-situational environment of light and
color.3
Also on view will be the nine works from 1968 that belong to a series titled two primary series and one secondary.
Comprised of three sets of three works (one set in red and yellow fluorescent light; the second in red and blue; and
the third in red and green), each set is composed of a cumulative system of vertical lamps. While they each stand
alone as individual works, these constructions demonstrate Flavin’s interest in serial and permutational configurations.
This series was first shown in its entirety at Galerie Heiner Friedrich, Munich in 1968, and a complete group of all nine
works is in the collection of the Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main.
Flavin employed systematic compositions throughout his career, and the exhibition will include a group of late works
from 1990 that project a sequential color arrangement into space: untitled (for John Heartfield) 3a-d forms a series of
four individual works. While each of these works are arranged in the same construction of vertical and perpendicular
lamps, they are distinctly organized in terms of a progression defined by the artist’s employment of color.
On the occasion of the exhibition, the gallery will publish an extensive monograph devoted to the artist’s work in
collaboration with Steidl, Göttingen. The publication will contain rare archival documentation and new scholarship on
the artist by contributors that include Tiffany Bell and will be available in spring 2010.
For further information, please contact Kristine Bell at 212 517 8677 or kristine@davidzwirner.com.
For press inquiries, please contact Julia Joern at 212 727 2070 or julia@davidzwirner.com.
Opening reception: Thursday, November 5, 6 - 8 pm
David Zwirner
525 West 19th Street New York, NY 10011
Gallery Hours
10am to 6pm Tuesday-Saturday