Monday, April 11, 2011

TIME

With the inception of mark making came the ability to record events people and places. It became a tradition or "written record" of the past for future viewers. With that impulse, drawing continued for centuries. At various points in history it was important to capture a specific moment of a story or action and emphasis came to freezing the participants at the desired moment. Later, artists began to question or expand upon this convention, they became sensitive to time itself and the speed in a moment. Could it be stretched to seem active for an eternity? They became aware of the sense of time IN the artwork and not only its depiction. This could be a quality of time in the artwork separate, faster, slower, longer, endless than that of the viewer's world. Over the course of history it led to inventions of sequenced panels, stroboscopic movement, control of color and apparent space and a surface record (of accumulated movements of the artist) to address qualities of time. Below we see examples of artists addressing time in very individual ways.

Stroboscopic Photograph
Here we see the multiple moments of a motion. Within one picture we see more than a single moment captured, a sequence of positions indicating a beginning and end point.

Duchamp- Nude Descending a Staircase
Not unlike the previous example, we are able to see multiple positions of a movement sequenced and compressed into one picture. In a sense Duchamp captured a small passage of time, every instance existing simultaneously. It is comparable to a long duration photo.
Morandi
In this example we see an artist using composition, color, and space to hint at a feeling of time/ timelessness. By lowering the contrast, bring the colors to a neutral key, predominantly verticals and horizontal lines, we sense a slowing down of time, a stillness. The opposite would be a 'fast' experience- bright colors, lots of diagonals, heavy contrast.

Agnes Martin
Another example that hints at a sense of time or slowness this time without using representational imagery. The formal qualities mentioned in Morandi are clearly seen here again.

De Chirico
In this example, we see a space devoid of time. There is a sense of time of day (maybe evening-ish) but also a sense that it is always that same time. Some of this is accomplished by the light created and also the space. The space is vast and vacant. In the mind, time and space are linked, are larger space indicates a longer time to transverse it, or a slowing down.

Hopper
Hopper's example shows us the psychology of time. His people are usually alone and in a different time than others- the endless solitude of loneliness, or lost amongst others. There is always a quality in his work that this moment repeats (day in day out, meet at the same spot with the regulars always there etc.) and implies that this is a regular occurrence. An example of a moment presented to last indefinitely.

Bacon
Bacon found inspiration in stroboscopic photography. We can see a possible reference in his attempt to capture a portrait of a person. Is a person's likeness that frozen pose, or an organism moving about experiencing time? How would you convey this?

Bacon
One of Bacon's most famous work. A riff on Velasquez's Pope Innocencio X. Below you will see the original. But first think about how the figure is presented, the intensity of colors, the intense directional stroke, that emotion in the strokes. Again it appears to be a duration of time captured (along with psychological content) rather than the actual likeness of the person.

Velasquez and Bacon
Obviously two different takes on the same portrait of the pope (both with different agendas). One appears to capture the frozen moment and likeness, the other the accumulated moments frantic tortured psychology of a person. There is also the indirect time element of Bacon referencing a painting from long ago.

Damien Loeb
With this example I am referencing our next project- Cinematic History Redux. This artist takes images from movies and puts them together for his own purposes. There is an intense attention to detail and virtuosity of skill. But there continues the sense of movie time, part of a larger narrative playing out.

Damien Loeb
Another example of movie time. But what is interesting is the moment the artist chose. Is it a scene right before the films climax or a random choice. This brings to question what moment is important to freeze, which has the qualities you are seeking- build- up, climax, aftermath, random, etc.