Showing posts with label cosmos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cosmos. Show all posts

Friday, 2 June 2017

Keith Tyson Turn Back Now at Jerwood Hastings


Keith Tyson - Turn Back Now at Jerwood Hastings

Nearly 15 years ago whilst at the Philip Guston exhibition at the Royal Academy I watched a video which outlined Guston’s studio practise. He stated that he would enter the studio and then start work but if it was working well felt like the art had taken over and he was no longer making the decisions. Visiting the Keith Tyson exhibition at the Jerwood in Hastings I felt that statement coming to life. The idea of studio practise being absolutely central to an artist’s experience has been acknowledged, extended and applauded in a way that takes the viewer firstly into the intimacies of the artist thought levels but then outward into extremes of the universe and an exploration of the very edges of our concepts and understandings.

The initial room is full from floor to ceiling with more or less identically sized framed paintings. It is reminiscent of the library story by Jorge Luis Borges, where the reader is led through the book shelves with endless copies of the same book which gradually progress and change as you leaf through each copy in search of an ending which is forever elusive. In Tyson’s case these are described more as sketchbook pages than as individual experiences. They are large scale, way beyond the normal size of a sketchbook and are wall drawings that are executed continuously in Tyson’s studio. Chronology is thrown out of the window and the exhibits are arranged according to Tyson’s choice and dictate. Whether this dictate would be constant or a path of continuous change becomes part of the essential workings of the process. Like rearranging a chess board, each piece being essential to the scheme of things but being variable in its positioning; they work as teams but also stand alone. Subject matter moves and shifts with whim and affect.  Occasionally tying in with momentous occasions such as a portrait of Baraka Obama or more prophetically Donald Trump. Other times it seems deeply personalised as in the ones that mention marriage counselling. There is confessional at work here;  a blood letting in order to self deprecate and expose. 

This exploration of the self which is then woven into aspects of the outside world and then innermost thoughts about the physical nature of the universe seems well summed up in a statement that appears on one of the drawings from May 4 2004 “All acts of artistic imagination are discoveries rather than inventions”. 

It is the nature of the practise that the process is exploratory and research based. In some ways the most important aspect of the work is in the setting up of the final exhibition. Like a gambler or a card shark Tyson uses both the aspect of chance that comes from such things as John Cage and Mark Boyle alongside the domestic and the way we all organise our possessions. Oh but of course that boomerang should go next the that clown because of the similarity between the clown’s mouth and the wooden artefact.

There are 3 rooms in the exhibition each loosely titled as Day to Day, Microcosmic and Cosmic. The Day to Day is by far the largest with the Microcosmic significantly reduced in size to house a mock up of a main frame computer. The structure lies on its side and is meticulous in its depiction of the valves and boxes that presumably housed the original computer. Clear highways and byways seem to move information about as if literally being carried along the wires as if by horse drawn carriage. It is a far cry from the way that information now moves through the air in invisible movements that surround us and engulfing us in a way that remains invisible and yet instantly accessible. This reference to the origins of information technology seems apt when you start to consider the way that Tyson operates. Many of the wall drawings are dated with a single date. Some of them are extremely complex in execution and seems to suggest that once started Tyson spends a whole heap of time in the studio until it is finished. Each one then becomes a window on that aspect of Tyson’s time. A static version of windows on a computer. When you put a search into a computer it brings up endless variables, a non stop access to random selection. And yet once reduced to the physical to the mere structure of a machine it then begins to take on other implications. The thing that immediately comes to mind is the animal mazes that behaviourists use to judge animals and the way that they operate their intelligence. A 2016 statement in one of Tyson’s drawings hints at this link as well “Chronic overcrowding in rats caused enlarged adrenal glands”.  Again what we have is a way to explore ideas that start with the main frame but then counterbalance this with the fundamentals of the creative process. There are of course similarities  between the way that museums curate and use their collections to explore the deeper implications of the human condition and its development. 

Whether it be the Guston view of the studio which acknowledges the artist as a medium for the imagination or the way that artists like Lucien Freud or Frank Auerbach spend huge amounts of time isolated in their studio exploring in great depth their response to similar daily stimulus and routine, self imposed isolation is a key to many artist’s practise. Tyson is not alone in the way that he monopolises and explores his internal meditations with his external stimuli, the recent Joseph Cornel exhibition at the Royal Academy showed up a process that turned the mundane into the cosmic and added extra terrestrial implication to the everyday. This in some ways is the closest to Tyson’s way of working. The wardrobe entrance to a hidden kingdom or in this case the table top launch pad to the nearest black hole.


The final room, “Cosmic” brings it all into a logic which both summarises as well as expands the process. A large scale view of the universe with a mirrored ball in the centre of the room. The ball has been attacked but never pierced by pieces of meteorite which stretch the surface and create new visions  of the world that surround it. Distortions or extended realities? Or as Tyson puts it in August 23 2009: “How can I be shocked when I know deep down everything is the same age.”

Monday, 3 August 2015

4 x 4 Syria




My son was visiting Berlin and met a Syrian guy who he got chatting to. The Syrian was a refugee and talked a lot about the situation in Syria and how difficult it was living in a war torn country. When my son got back to England the guy sent him a picture of his town and said that the building in the centre was actually the house where he used to live. I was quite amazed by the way that some people have to come to terms with appalling conditions in their lives but also that we just take it for granted that it is quite normal to encounter these things on the internet or through television. Its the strangeness of watching the news whilst eating your dinner.
I have recently been working on a series of sculptures that are all based on building that are half demolished through such things as war. It seemed right to use the photo that my son had been sent as part of one of these sculptures. I will probably make it part of a series of 4.



Friday, 17 May 2013

Our Cosmic Burden - Plinth pair

Photo: Matt Page.

Some parts of Our Cosmic Burden have been made with pairs in mind. Its just the way that things work out sometimes with ideas. It seems easier to work on more than one piece at a time and for some reason one starts influencing the other so you find yourself trying to balance them out. A sort of conceptual interdependancy. Its not like they cant ever be seperated though. They are like the other figures in the piece. They could be viewed together or seperately. Its kind of nice to think of sculptural pieces being independant and having a character of their own. Their relationship to other pieces then becomes a developing thing within itself.

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Our Cosmic Burden


This is possibly the first photo that I have of them all together. There are 16 of them and they can be exhibited in any format really but normally I didn't envisage them so crowded together. Pushing them together though makes it look like a protest meeting which is rather nice.

Had a photo session a couple of weeks ago with Matt Page taking the photos in a studio session so will be posting a variety of them over the next few weeks.

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Hungarian lady

Rather like someone arriving with a whole load of presents. Maybe just a way of exploring the way that we move through space.

Sunday, 20 May 2012

Phoenix Brighton Open


Photos of Exhibition at Phoenix Brighton Open Studios
                                           Our Cosmic Burden
                                            Landscape Walking Location shot

Sunday, 11 March 2012

Cosmic cup sculpture


I suppose this is about as literal as I am going to get. Molecules, atoms, particles, all there. Apparently particles pass through us all the time and carry on to wherever they are going to end up. It kind of changes the way that you look at anything really.