• NATURE IN ACE���� – David Hatchett

    Date posted: June 18, 2006 Author: jolanta
    NATURE IN ACE����
    David Hatchett
    DA-O-BA IV, 1969

    DA-O-BA IV, 1969

     

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>The nature of electricity is
    movement and, generally speaking, when electricity is used as an element in art,
    it moves. Film, video, and amplified music are all "moving" arts that
    are perceived over a length of time. This element of time creates a context
    that is easily assimilated into our day-to-day existence, because everything
    that we do is stretched out in time. Art that does not move has a chance to
    break that pattern and create a situation that heightens the awareness of
    perception.

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    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>Two shows from the Ace Gallery, the
    David Hammons show from last Spring, and the Keith Sonnier show that is up
    through December 03, both use electric light as a primary element of the art.
    Sonnier uses neon, incandescent, and florescent lights as materials to
    construct his sculpture. Hammons turned lights off to provide the complete
    absence of light. Both shows provide examples of this particular power that is
    at the essence of the still arts.

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    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>The Sonnier light sculptures are
    from the late sixties and early seventies. Most of these pieces are created
    with neon. The neon tubes are simply shaped and wired together to create linear
    sculpture of colored light. The lit tubes are displayed as nothing more than
    themselves, containers of light that surround planes of colored air and radiate
    into the atmosphere around them, lightly tinting their surroundings. The
    physical hardware, tubes, wiring, and transformers, are left bare, as objects,
    their presence made more surreal, more sensual, bathed in their own radiant
    light. The sound of the electricity that emanates from the hardware almost
    snaps the air around the gas filled tubes and the electrical transformers.
    Walking around a room filled with these pieces is an exploration of not only
    physical objects radiating light in a room, but also an exploration of what it
    feels like internally to be alive in that room at that moment in time.

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    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>The Ace Gallery is a huge,
    cavernous space, with large openings in a long wide corridor that open into
    vast exhibition spaces. This allows for big installations, or in the case of
    the David Hammons show, lack of installation. Hammons simply turned the lights
    off and invited the art viewers to view nothing except vast areas of complete,
    black darkness. Viewers were given small flashlights that emanated a dim blue
    light, enough to illuminate the area a couple of feet in front of their step,
    but other than that, there were no other objects to contemplate, and there was
    nothing for sale.

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    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>I missed the opening, but I can
    imagine the space filled with points of blue light reminiscent of Bush Senior’s
    famous "thousand points of light" vision. But walking through the vast
    empty darkness alone, with the small blue light used sparingly was an
    extraordinary, sensual experience. At one point, with the use of the flashlight
    to momentarily illuminate a small area around me, I could imagine what it might
    feel like to be a burglar, alone in a strange house. But stepping slowly,
    cautiously into total darkness was exhilarating. My body was filled with
    vibrating anticipation, a kind of reaching out into darkness, trying to detect
    mass, a wall, a doorway, the end to this vast void.

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    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>In both shows, the experience of
    perception was exhilarating and enlightening at once, a moment where intellect
    and sensation merge, a moment where human consciousness is Nature.

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