His early work is in dialogue with the tradition of the photographic still-life and its reference into abstract painting. In his newest series of work Caldicott completely leaves the realm of the object and deals directly with abstraction in itself.
Solo show
The early work of Richard Caldicott is in dialogue with the tradition of the
photographic still-life and its reference into abstract painting. His objects of
plastic everyday day Tupperware are taken out of its context and are canonised into
the realms of 60's abstract art in a post modern , humorous manner. As Christopher
Schreier writes: "Of a quite commanding, space-impinging presence, their dispute
with painting, however, lies on a different, non-metric level. Even a first
impression reveals the painterly qualities of his art. what we take in is summed up
in a phrase Eugene Delacroix once coined for painting, namely "sensations
colourantes", the visual sensations that seem sufficient unto themselves and the eye
of the beholder.
We may be tempted to regard these pictures purely for pleasure, and indeed the
works' subtle play of colour and form suggests this response. Caldicott's works
cultivate an aestheticism that makes the viewer almost forget that these photographs
possess an outside reference. Seen purely as motifs, they go back to an inventory of
plastic dishes or containers, mostly Tupperware, that in the early and mid-nineties
Richard Caldicott piled up into imposing plastic structures. Although one might
identify an individual salad bowl or lemon squeezer, the total form possesses a
sef-referentiality that Caldicott has developed in later years. The ironic contrast
between an apparently modernist-constructivist sculpture and the reality of its
trivial, everyday substance, is no longer really the issue. It may have been a sign
of (English?) humour, but Caldicott's art has always meant to be earnest. His
concern is the metamorphosis of the everyday, which for him has something almost
alchemical about it. This unquestionably goes one step further that photography's
chemical transformation of reality into two dimensional pictures at the touch of a
button. The works show that he is aiming for a kind of transmutation of the
functionality and entity of everyday objects in to two dimensional pictures at the
touch of a button. The works show that he is aiming for a kind of transmutation of
the functionality and entity of everyday objects into the shimmering presence of
simple translucent forms"
In His newest series of work Caldicott completely leaves the realm of the
photographic object and deals directly with abstraction in itself. Daniel Buren
maintained that "colour is the most interesting thing in art because it is the only
thing you cannot speak about". It is with this in mind that one should look at
Caldicott's work. Working from collages and assemblages and then photographed
stringently, by different techniques and presented as a photographic object in
itself, his work has evolved, where. the object as subject has disappeared
altogether, leaving only what were formerly colour backgrounds arranged in abstract,
geometric compositions that constitute autonomous objects in their own right. In his
images the collage, however, is never 'stuck down' it is only the process of
photographing it that fixes the final result into an object.
Derek Horton writes: "It is significant that Caldicott refers to his latest works as
"Constructions", a term that simultaneously suggests the manual making of things and
a connection to constructivism and architecture. Furthermore there is also a direct
link to the minimal art era and Donald Judd's Specific Objects , "holistic and
unified art objects that are neither painting nor sculpture"
For its maker and viewer alike, Caldicott's art involves looking back into
constructivist art and modernist design, referencing its purity of form and, by
indirect allusion at least its utopian agenda...Whilst his work may suggest that
Caldicott is an 'unreconstructed modernist', it is arguable that it is impossible
now to make work 'as' a modernist - one can only refer to modernism or to use a term
beloved of post modern theorists 'cite it'. For much post modern art such citation
relies on pastiche that critiques or even lampoons modernism and its values., but
for some artists of Caldicott's generation, who were exposed to post modern pastiche
at its peak in the 1980's, it is possible now to look back to modernism from a
different perspective, to be outside it but remain in many ways respectful or
admiring of it" (Derek Horton Seeing through Modernism: Transparency, absence,
construction)
Richard Caldicott (b 1963 in Leicester) studied at the Royal College of Art in
London where he also lives and works. He has had many solo and group exhibitions in
Europe and the US and is represented in the following collections: Art Lab, Tokyo,
Karl Blossfeldt/Albert Renger Patzsch Archiv, Kunstmuseum Bonn, Merril Lynch, Sir
Elton John Collection, BP Amoco etc.
Opening reception: Friday, 20 April, 6:30
Galerie f5,6
Ludwigstr. 7 (Odeonsplatz) - Munich
Opening hours: Tues-Fri 11am-7pm, Sat 12-5pm
Free admission