Katharina Grosse
Atoms Inside Balloons April 29 – June 10, 2007
Katharina Grosse Was Here
Framed as a quest, the history of modern
painting is a turbulent narrative. The holy grail
in this instance is the essence of painting,
i.e., those properties defining painting as an
autonomous discipline, a purely aesthetic
activity free from all worldly constraints,
something made exclusively to be looked at.
If the quest were whittled down to a single,
fundamental property, it would be pure color.
From Impressionism to the Washington Color
School, the liberation of color came about
in stages that, told in another fashion, can be understood as
the dismantling of a hard won mastery of
illusionistic representation.
Yet the advent of abstraction hardly marked
the triumph of color. Painting, in the early
part of the Twentieth Century, was dominated by
cubism and its attendant debates over form,
specifically the rendering of three dimensional
form on to the picture plane in a way that would
maintain an integrity to the picture plane?s
flatness. Even though Fauvism was an
alternative to cubism, color, no matter how key
an element in, say, Matisse?s paintings, was
still subordinate to line and shape. Although the
question was on the table as to whether color,
in and of itself, could determine a painting?s
structure, in order for the primacy of color to
assert itself, form, composition, and, last but not
least paint handling, as it had been lionized by
De Kooning and Pollock, would have to follow
in the footsteps of illusionistic representation
and be eliminated from the picture. In this
regard, Color Field painting came at the tail end
of a dialectic characterized by a series of
sacrifices each of which seemed like a threat to
painting?s continued development. But after
tossing out the baby and bathwater, why keep
the bathtub of stretcher bars and canvas?
While developments in post Color Field painting,
notably the work of the French group
Support/Surface, Sam Gilliam and Lynda
Benglis would problematize painting?s means of
support, with the exception of Niele Toroni, its
sustained abandonment was out of the question.
Katharina Grosse?s site specific
paintings/installations are a phoenix from the
ashes of late modernism. Since 1998 Grosse
has been using a compressed air spray gun to
apply garish swaths and splashes of undulating
color directly to gallery walls with sublimely
spectacular results. Whether wild or discreet,
her installations append themselves to
modernist painting?s Greenbergian cul de sac
in an uncanny manner that is the better part
of their beauty. To use Freud?s language, if the
primacy of color can be characterized as a
?latent? rather than ?manifest? objective in the
development of modern painting, then it is fair
to speak of color as repressed. Read through
her work, what passed for the liberation of color
would seem little more than color?s continued
repression so long as painting was unwilling to
do away with the means of support that defines
the historical trajectory of easel painting.
In other words, this traditional means of support
functioned as painting?s ego, representing all a
painting could know of itself as contained within
the edges of the stretched canvas. Knowing no
such boundaries, Grosse?s installations are
modernist painting?s unruly id.
Grosse is forever in Jules Olitski?s debt.
He was the first painter to regularly use a spray
gun. Regarding Olitski?s use of the spray gun,
Greenberg wrote, ?the grainy surface Olitski
creates with his way of spraying is a new kind
of paint surface. It offers tactile associations
hitherto foreign, more or less, to picture-making;
and it does new things with color. Together with
color, it contrives an illusion of depth back to
the picture?s surface; it is as if that surface, in all
its literalness, were enlarged to contain a world
of color and light differentiations impossible
to flatness but which yet manages not to violate
flatness.? Grosse?s palette is too saturated to
achieve the illusion of depth of which Greenberg
writes. That is not her goal. If anything, for an
illusion of depth she has substituted the
actual architectural space in which the work is
sited. Paradoxically, Grosse?s work often
obliterates the corners where walls and ceiling
meet, forcing architecture to succumb to the
flat space of painting.
Beyond reveling in the primacy of color and
Olitski?s precedent-setting use of the spray gun,
Grosse?s work quickly distances itself from
Color Field painting. This is even more the case
when Grosse spray paints over various objects?
furniture, clothing, mounds of earth?a tactic
incorporated into her work a few years after the
first spray gun installation. While the strictly
painterly works are capable of an astounding
range of expression based exclusively on color
and gesture, the works including objects
introduce a narrative element bringing wholly
fresh facets of modernist painting, from
Surrealism to Rauschenberg?s Combines, within
her sphere of reference. In any case, however,
Grosse?s use of color is such that it is no longer
an attribute subordinate to the sum total of
properties that make up our perception of
an object. It is neither the color of a substance
nor the color of a surface but color as its own
substance acting independently of the surfaces
to which it is applied. Just as her work extends
a logic in which color was reified within painting
only to be altogether reified from painting, in
the works incorporating objects, color is wholly
reified from things in order to question what and
how we see in a more general fashion. In other
words, Grosse?s work isn?t merely about reified
color, it is ultimately about reified vision, one
freed from utilitarian ends to an extent and
in a manner that makes it hard to imagine the
liberation of vision on terms other than those
of color run rampant.
Needless to say, Grosse?s use of the spray
gun brings her work into direct dialogue
with graffiti in terms of spray paint?s ?tactile
associations? which at the time of the above
quote from Greenberg were ?hitherto foreign,
more or less, to picture-making.? This is
certainly no longer the case as graffiti has been
brought well into the fold of easel painting?s
repertoire of styles from, say, Twombly to
Basquiat. Of greater importance with regard
to graffiti is the performative aspect of Grosse?s
work. Her projects, surveyed one to the next,
read as the work of a tagger, a stylistically
explicit statement to the effect of ?Katharina
Grosse Was Here.? Within the flux of their
formlessness, Grosse?s moves, like those of
a surfer or skateboarder, are best described
in the diminutive of radical, i.e., as ?rad.? Under
the aegis of pure color, however, her work
is anything but a form of writing as is graffiti.
Grosse?s color is a form of non sense in the best
and truest sense. The work ascribes less
to a logic and more to a psychology of color
where it is more about the perceiver than the
perceived; color as a subjectively irreducible
experience. To borrow a quote from The
Meaning of Art, a 1940 lecture by Josef Albers:
"Art is concerned with something that
cannot be explained by words or literal
description...art is revelation instead of
information, expression instead of
description, creation instead of imitation
or repetition...Art is concerned with the
HOW, not the WHAT; not the literal content,
but the performance of factual content.
The performance?how it is done?that
is the content of art."
For Albers, as with Grosse, color is an itch
theory could never fully scratch. All the so-called laws of color are subject to interpretation
as borne out in each and every individual
painting. As Homage to the Square, Albers?
monumental series of color studies begun
in 1950 and continued through to his death in
1976, serves to prove, color is an empirically
driven area of endless experimentation.
A mere two blocks from the site of the first
self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction,
Atoms Inside Balloons, Grosse?s Renaissance
Society exhibition, is also a response to the
gallery?s 30 foot high, neo-gothic ceiling. As with
all of Grosse?s work, Atoms Inside Balloons is in
line with Greenberg?s assessment that
?Modernist art belongs to the same specific
cultural tendency as modern science.?
And within a history of modernist painting
characterized as an evolution towards its own
self truth, Grosse is indeed a free radical.
Author: Hamza Walker
|
|