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Seleccionado segunda ronda del Wu. Si quieres que gane, dale al corazoncito. Los 4 que tengan mĂĄs se llevan el boleto. ÂĄA votar!
Seleccionado segunda ronda del Wu. Si quieres que gane, dale al corazoncito. Los 4 que tengan mĂĄs se llevan el boleto. ÂĄA votar!
Mark Rothko
âIâm interested only in expressing basic human emotions. And the fact that a lot of people break down and cry when confronted with my pictures shows that I can communicate these basic human emotions.â
âLook, itâs my misery that I have to paint this kind of painting, itâs your misery that you have to love it, and the price of the misery is thirteen hundred and fifty dollars.â
- Mark Rothko (1903-1970)
Bridgetâs Bardo, Ganzfeld Series, 2009
By WIL S. HYLTON l The New York Times Magazine June 13, 2013
It was a beautiful Thursday morning in May, and everything was going wrong. James Turrell had six days to prepare for the biggest museum exhibition of his life â 11 complex installation pieces at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art â but he didnât have a single work finished, and he was missing crucial parts.
He shuffled into the office of Lacmaâs director, Michael Govan, and flopped into a chair with a sigh.
âIâm pretty concerned,â Turrell said. âYou know, the computer that came back from Russia was completely wiped.â
Govan tapped a foot underneath the table. The computer was essential. Much of Turrellâs work consists of special rooms that are infused with unusual light, and the computer helps run the show. It had been in Russia for another exhibition, but something went awry in transit.
âThereâs nothing in it,â Turrell said. âNothingâs in it at all! Nothing.â
Govan shook his head calmly. âThat happens in Moscow,â he said.
Turrell shifted uncomfortably in his seat. âI guess,â he said. âI donât have a piece thatâs finished yet. You know, itâs getting late on everything.â
âHas the lens left Frankfurt?â Govan asked. This was another essential part.
âNo, it hasnât left Frankfurt,â Turrell said.
âI thought it did,â Govan said.
âNo, no,â Turrell said. âIt has not left Frankfurt. I donât know whatâs going on.â
Now it was Govanâs turn to sigh. âYou should have been a painter,â he said. âFive years of planning, three months of construction, and thereâs not one work of art.â
The plan had been simple on paper: Turrell would open three major shows inside a month. As soon as he finished the Lacma pieces, he would race to Texas for another huge installation at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and then to Manhattan, where he is opening a show at the Guggenheim next week. Taken together, the three-museum retrospective is the biggest event in the art world this summer. As the curator of the Houston exhibition, Alison de Lima Greene, put it, âThis is the first time that three museums have mounted exhibitions of this magnitude in conjunction, all devoted to a single artist.â In total, the retrospective takes up 92,000 square feet.
Assembling any Turrell show is a complicated affair. Unlike a show of paintings and sculpture, every piece must be built on site, and even more than with most installation art, his work requires elaborate modifications to the museum itself. Windows must be blocked off or painted black to obscure the outside light; zigzagging hallways are constructed to isolate rooms; and each of the rooms has to be built according to Turrellâs meticulous designs, with hidden pockets to conceal light bulbs and strange protruding corners that confuse the eye. Even the drywall must be hung and finished with exacting precision, so that each corner, curve and planar surface is precise to 1/64th of an inch. It can take hundreds of man-hours to finish a single room; he was erecting 11 at Lacma.
Turrell at 70 is a burly man with thick white hair and a snowy beard. He tends to dress in dark clothing, like Santa Claus in mourning. We had been spending a lot of time together as he prepared for the shows, and I had followed him to Los Angeles to see the final stages. After the conversation with Govan, I retreated outside and found a bench in the shade to do some reading. I expected to be there a while. Two hours later, I looked up and saw Turrell standing there with a smile. âWell,â he said, âweâve got one ready. Come on, letâs take a look.â
I followed him inside the building, and we rode an elevator to the second floor. We stepped into a dim lobby filled with construction equipment. âThis way,â he said, turning into a dark hallway. I walked behind, my hands groping for the walls. Turrell stayed a few steps ahead, muttering directions â âforward now, another step, this way, and turnâ â until I rounded the final corner and saw the piece materialize before me. It was a looming plane of green light that shimmered like an apparition. The rush of blood to my head nearly brought me to my knees.
It is difficult to say much more about the piece without descending into gibberish. This is one of the first things you notice when you spend time around Turrell. Though he is uncommonly eloquent on a host of subjects, from Riemannian geometry to vortex dynamics, he has developed a dense and impenetrable vocabulary to describe his work. Nearly everyone who speaks and writes about Turrell uses the same infernal jargon. It can be grating to endure a cocktail party filled with people talking about the âthingness of lightâ and the âalpha stateâ of mind â at least until youâve seen enough Turrell to realize that, without those terms, it would be nearly impossible to discuss his work. It is simply too far removed from the language of reality, or for that matter, from reality itself.
The piece that day at Lacma, for example, was one of his âWedgeworksâ series. The room was devoid of boundaries, just an eternity of inky blackness, with the outline of a huge lavender rectangle floating in the distance, and beyond it, the tall plane of green light stretching toward an invisible horizon, where it dissolved into a crimson stripe.
I suppose it would be fair to say that all of this was an illusion. The shapes and contours I saw were made entirely of light, while the actual walls of the room were laid out in a way I could never have guessed. When, after a few minutes, a museum worker accidentally flipped on a bright light, I was surprised to see a small chamber in the back, with a workmanâs ladder propped against the wall. Turrell lurched toward the doorway in a panic, crying out, âWhat the hell are they doing?â
Other pieces by Turrell are even more disorienting. His âDark Spacesâ can require 30 minutes of immersion before you begin to see a swirling blur of color, while some of his rooms are so flooded with light that the effect is instantly overpowering. Stepping into one of his âGanzfeldâ rooms is like falling into a neon cloud. The air is thick with luminous color that seems to quiver all around you, and it can be difficult to discern which way is up, or out.
Not everyone enjoys the Turrell experience. It requires a degree of surrender. There is a certain comfort in knowing what is real and where things are; to have that comfort stripped away can be rapturous, or distressing. It can even be dangerous. During a Turrell show at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1980, several visitors to a piece called âCity of Arhiritâ became unsteady in the bright blue haze and tried to brace themselves against a wall made of light. Some of them fell down. A few got hurt. One woman, who broke her arm, sued the Whitney and Turrell for more than $10,000, claiming that the show made her so âdisoriented and confusedâ that she âviolently precipitated to the floor.â Another visitor, who sprained her wrist, sued the Whitney for $250,000. The museumâs insurance company then filed a claim against Turrell, and although a member of the Whitney family put a stop to the suit, Turrell still gets sore thinking about it. He spent $30,000 to defend himself, but itâs not the money that bothers him the most. Itâs the lingering feeling that the work didnât ⊠work.
âOn some level,â he told me, âyouâd have to say I failed.â
We were at his townhouse on Gramercy Park in Manhattan. Like Turrellâs other two homes, in northern Arizona and eastern Maryland, it was furnished mostly in the Shaker style. The walls were cream, with very little hanging art, and the furniture was all in cherry. Turrell sat at the center of a dining table and began to describe other incidents. One of his friends had taken a tumble at the same Whitney show. âHe was just standing there,â Turrell said with a shrug, âand he leaned back and fell.â At a show in Vienna, another visitor took a running start and leapt into a Ganzfeld room, perhaps expecting to land on a bed of pillowy clouds. She smashed into a wall. And then there were the âPerceptual Cells.â
The Perceptual Cells are Turrellâs most extreme work. The visitor approaches a giant sphere that looks like an oversize Ping-Pong ball and lies down on something like a morgue drawer to be pushed inside. When the door is shut, the lights come on, so bright that itâs almost pointless to close your eyes. As the colors shift and morph, you begin to see things that arenât there, like tiny rainbows floating in space and crisp geometric forms. It turns out that what youâre seeing is the biological structure of your own eye, which, in the blinding intensity, has turned on itself.
Even Turrell describes the Perceptual Cells as âinvasiveâ and âoppressive.â Some of his most avid fans prefer not to see the series. Andrea Glimcher represents Turrell at the Pace Gallery in Manhattan, but when she visited Lacma for the opening in May, she declined to view the Perceptual Cell. âJust thinking about it makes me want to press a panic button,â she told me. When one of the curators of this yearâs Guggenheim exhibition, Nat Trotman, viewed the Perceptual Cell at Lacma, he wrote me to say that it had ârewiredâ his thinking and was âvery aggressive and very hallucinatory.â Before viewers climb into the Perceptual Cells, Turrell makes them sign waivers to certify that they are 18 years old, sober and sane.
The joke among Turrellâs friends is that, to see his work, you must first become hopelessly lost. Though he is routinely listed among the signature artists of his generation (in 1984, he and Robert Irwin became the first visual artists to receive MacArthur âgeniusâ grants), he has never enjoyed the widespread recognition of artists like Donald Judd, Jasper Johns and Chuck Close. In fact, Turrell has not held a major museum show in New York since the Whitney exhibition of 1980, or in Los Angeles since 1985.
Much of his art is located in the far corners of the earth. There is an 18,000-square-foot museum devoted to Turrell in the mountains of Argentina, a monumental pyramid he constructed in eastern Australia and an even larger one on the YucatĂĄn Peninsula, with chambers that capture natural light.
Turrellâs greatest work and lifelong fixation is an extinct volcano on his ranch in Arizona, where he has been developing a network of tunnels and underground rooms since 1974. The volcano has a bowl-shaped depression on its top and is known as Roden Crater. Turrell has never opened the crater to the public, and he is guarded about who sees it. An invitation to visit Roden is one of the most coveted tickets in American art.
âIt has become, even unfinished, as important as any artwork ever made,â Michael Govan said. âI know Iâm going out on a limb here a little bit, but I think itâs one of the most ambitious artworks ever attempted by a single human being.â
Turrellâs obsession with the crater is the stuff of legend, but he prefers not to analyze it. For a man driven by such a monomaniacal artistic impulse, he is startlingly uninterested in himself. Through dozens of conversations in multiple cities over perhaps a hundred hours, I found him willing to examine almost any idea, so long as it didnât require any self-reflection. I would ask, for example, about his place in the art world, or his faith, or lack of it, or how he feels about the crater as he grows older and the forces of obsession and mortality collide â and each time he would nod and frown and say something like, âWell, you know, you just have to accept things as they are.â Then he would launch into a 30-minute dissertation on the geometry of sailboat hulls. The more questions you ask Turrell, the more elusive he seems. Growing up Quaker, he was always being told to nurture âthe light within.â At 70, he seems more interested in the light without.
Some of Turrellâs contemporaries view the mystery around him with a measure of envy. One day this spring, I stopped by the studio of Chuck Close in Lower Manhattan. There was a large, incomplete portrait of a woman hanging from one wall, with its lower half descending through a narrow gap in the floor. Close, who has been in a wheelchair since an arterial collapse in 1988, raises or lowers the canvas in order to reach the spot where heâs working. A few years ago, Turrell invited him to visit Roden Crater.
âI was shocked when I got out there,â Close said. First, that Turrell had made the crater wheelchair-accessible. âHe proudly put me in this four-wheel-drive golf cart and drove me all the way up into the thing.â But when they reached the top, Close found another surprise. Turrell has spent years shaping the rim of the caldera in such a way that it seems to distort the contour of the sky. He calls this âcelestial vaulting,â and he helped Close lie down to experience the phenomenon. Staring up, Close was struck in equal parts by the power of the illusion and its subtlety. âHeâs an orchestrator of experience,â Close said, ânot a creator of cheap effects. And every artists knows how cheap an effect is, and how revolutionary an experience.â
Close is among the most famous living painters, but when he looks at an artist like Turrell, it sometimes makes him skeptical of his own fame. âIt makes me wonder if Iâm making pabulum for the masses,â he said with a laugh. Close described how, in the 1960s, artists like Turrell and Robert Smithson and Walter de Maria âwanted to go in the desert and dig a hole or ride a motorcycle in a circle, or dig a ditch, or put a bunch of spikes for lightning to hit. It was about not making a commodity. Not making it something that would go in a gallery.â Many of those artists criticized Close for working in a more conventional medium. âIâve been arguing with Mel Bochner for years,â he said, âbecause Mel gave me tremendous grief for making stuff that hung on the wall, like I might just as well have been a prostitute inviting people up to my room.â
Close pointed out with a wry smile that most of those friends have since found a way to show their work. âAfter a while, they thought, Oh, no oneâs going to see this stuff!â he said. âSo then they take photographs. Then they frame the photographs and put them in a gallery.â Still, he sometimes wonders if they were on to something back in the â60s â and if Turrell, in his work at the crater, still is.
âI may be known by more people, but Iâm often known for all the wrong reasons,â Close said.
For his part, Turrell has begun to think more about what heâll leave behind. On a recent drive across the desert to see the crater, he turned to me and said, âI was absolutely going to get this project done by the year 2000, so Iâm a little embarrassed by it. There have been periods of euphoria. There have been times that Iâve been discouraged, and times when Iâve just gone out and enjoyed the place â and realized that maybe this would be it. Maybe it wouldnât get any further.â
We were approaching the crater through a field of impossibly picturesque cattle, their long, straight backs and thick conformation the envy of any rancher. Turrell bounced along at the wheel of the truck, smiling at the herd. âWeâve learned a lot about livestock,â he said, âbut the biggest thing is learning about personnel. You know, youâre not going to want artists to take care of your livestock.â
When Turrell first spotted the crater from an airplane in 1974, he had no intention of buying the land around it. He just wanted to dig into the volcano. He persuaded the Dia Art Foundation in Texas to purchase the site on his behalf. When the foundation spiraled into financial trouble a few years later, Turrell scrambled to take over the title. He applied for a loan, but the bank told him the ranch wasnât big enough to turn a profit. â©âThey said, âThis will just be a gentlemanâs ranch, and youâll lose money,â â Turrell said. âWhich I now understand is true. They said: âBut thereâs one ranch over thatâs now for sale. If you buy that one, and you buy the one in between, we think we could negotiate â we wonât loan you a little, but weâll loan you a lot!â â
Turrell by then was married with young children, and his wife opposed the purchase. âMy wife said at the time, âYouâre mortgaging our childrenâs future,â â he said, âand for that and other reasons, she left â and I took the loan.â
By the time Turrell had signed the note for all three ranches and leased the public land between them, he was the proud, solitary overseer of a 155-square-mile property that could be supported only with livestock. He was 36 years old and had never raised a cow in his life.
Turrell was brought up in Pasadena in a devout Quaker family. âIt was like the conservative Mennonites,â he said. âI come from a family that does not believe in art to this day. They think art is vanity.â Even as a child, Turrell was skeptical of the familyâs old-fashioned mores. Little things, like his motherâs refusal to use household appliances, bothered him. âMy mother did not have a toaster oven and would toast bread in the oven, which I thought was stupid,â he said. âThey didnât do cars and electricity, that kind of stuff.â
One of Turrellâs aunts, Frances Hodges, lived in Manhattan and worked for a fashion magazine. When Turrell visited, Hodges would take him to concerts and museums, expounding upon the virtues of engagement with modern life. âHer whole thought,â Turrell said, âwas doing something society would contend with. That was her purpose in fashion. She didnât care if it was a vanity.â On a trip to the Museum of Modern Art with Hodges in the 1950s, Turrell discovered the work of Thomas Wilfred, who experimented with projected light in the early 1900s. Turrell remembers staring at one of Wilfredâs âlight boxes,â in thrall to its shifting lines of shadow and color. Today, his home on Gramercy Park is next door to the one where Hodges lived.
In 1961, Turrell entered Pomona College to study math and perceptual psychology, but on the side, he continued to indulge his interest in art. He took courses in art history and signed up for studio classes. After graduation in 1965, he enrolled in a graduate art program at the University of California, Irvine. That wasnât to last. In 1966, he was arrested for coaching young men to avoid the Vietnam draft. He spent about a year in jail, and after his release in 1967, moved into a shuttered hotel in the Ocean Park section of Santa Monica. Over the next seven years, he would make a series of artistic breakthroughs that define his work today.
Turrell had discovered a strange optical effect in one of his projects for grad school. By placing a slide projector in an empty room and pointing its beam toward the corner, he found that he could make a cube of light that seemed to occupy physical space. As he settled into the rooms of the Mendota Hotel, he began to explore variations on the idea. Soon he was using colored slides and moving the projector around the room. He discovered that he could make pyramids and rectangles of light, which seemed to lean against the wall or float halfway to the ceiling. After a few months, he switched the bulb from tungsten to xenon, fascinated by the subtle difference in its effect. Over the next five decades, he would become an expert on light-bulb varieties, studying the distinctive character of neon, argon, ultraviolet, fluorescent and LEDs. For his 70th birthday last month, a friend gave him a bulb heâd never used before; Turrell was ecstatic.
By the late 1960s, he was also experimenting with outdoor light. He painted the windows of the hotel and scratched lines in the paint, allowing narrow slits of light to enter the room. He found that he could create patterns and illusions, much as he had with the projector. He called the series âMendota Stoppages,â and he felt they had at least one advantage over the projection series: Because the light came from outside, there was no machinery in the room. He had created a gallery in which the art was made entirely of light.
Turrell wanted to keep the room empty but fill it with electric light. He realized that he could modify the walls to create hidden chambers for the bulbs. He called these pieces âShallow Space Constructionsâ and tried a dozen permutations. In some, he tucked bulbs along a single edge of the room; in others, the whole frame of a wall glowed with brilliant color. One of the earliest Shallow Spaces, âRaemar Pink White,â is currently on display at Lacma. After 44 years, it still has the coruscating radiance of something from a future world.
By the early 1970s, Turrell was exploring another phenomenon with natural light. Instead of scratching paint on the windows, he cut large holes in the walls and ceiling of the old hotel to create a view of the open sky. With the right size of opening and the right vantage and some careful finish work, he found that it was possible to eliminate the sense of depth, so the sky appeared to be painted directly on the ceiling. Then he pointed electric lights at the hole, marveling at the dissonance between the light coming in and going out. He discovered that when he changed the color of the electric lights, he could change the apparent color of the sky. He called the series âSkyspaces.â
Read on
Secret Life IV, 1928
Rene Magritte
Edificio del restaurante (planta baja) y la biblioteca (alta planta), ClĂnicas de la Facultad de OdontologĂa, Universidad de Guadalajara, Centro Universitario de Ciencias de Salud, calle Sierra Mojada en Juan DĂaz Covarrubias, Independenica, Guadalajara, Jalisco, MĂ©xico 1967
Arqs. Horst Hartung y Job HernĂĄndez DĂĄvilaÂ
Building containing the restaurant (ground floor) and library (upper floor), Clinics of the Faculty of Dentistry, Unversity of Guadalajara, Sierra Mojada at Juan Diaz Covarrubias streets, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico 1967
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) dir. Stanley Kubrick âIâm afraid. Iâm afraid, Dave. Dave, my mind is going.â
Cogan House. Charles Gwathmey. Hook Pond, East Hampton, 1972. Photo by Ezra Stoller. Destroyed by the people, and replaced by the house in this link, http://www.bloomberg.com/image/iF5CIJ8o2Hlg.jpg.
Chefchaouen, a small town in northern Morocco, has a rich history, beautiful natural surroundings and wonderful architecture, but what itâs most famous for are the striking and vivid blue walls of many of the buildings in its âold townâ sector, or medina.
The maze-like medina sector, like those of most of the other towns in the area, features white-washed buildings with a fusion of Spanish and Moorish architecture. The brilliantly blue walls, however, seem to be unique to Chefchaouen. They are said to have been introduced to the town by Jewish refugees in 1930, who considered blue to symbolize the sky and heaven. The color caught on, and now many also believe that the blue walls serve to repel mosquitoes as well (mosquitoes dislike clear and moving water).
Whatever the reason, the townâs blue walls attract visitors who love to wander the townâs narrow streets and snap some beautiful photos.Â
Here, the typical Corbusian cross (wide arms and a short head) is found in front of an unusual vertical aperture that aligns with a small door below.Â
1953-1960 |Â Le Corbusier & Iannis Xenakis
Dominican Monastery at Sainte Marie de la Tourette, Ăveux (near Lyon), RhĂŽne-Alpes, France
Residencia unifamiliar La Macarrona (Somosaguas, Madrid)
Vista desde el jardin posterior hacia el vestĂbulo de la entrada, entre los dos pabellones, Casa Cawthorne, calle del Fuego 416, Jardines del Pedregal, MĂ©xico DF 1965
Arq. Kay Cawthorne
View from the rear garden towards the front hall between the two wings, Casa Cawthorne, calle del Fuego 416, Pedregal, Mexico City 1965
Le Corbusier Maisons Jaoul Neuilly-sur-Seine, Paris, Francia 1951-1955
Photo: Seier+Seier
1951-1956 | Le Corbusier | Maisons Jaoul, Neuilly-sur-Seine, FranceÂ
this is the greatest thing, ever
Mexicoâs Day of Rage
43 college students were abducted on Sept. 26th in Guerrero, Mexico. Police and gunmen shot 6 students to death before taking the other 43. Mexico has taken some action by arresting the âmayor of the city of Iguala, JosĂ© Luis Abarca; his wife, MarĂa de los Ăngeles Pineda; and an aide and charged them with masterminding the attack.â
Why arenât more people talking about this?
(Pictures are from the link above)