"To become
like music": late modernist painting, performance
and the musical avant-garde, 1945-1965
Curated by Chris Townsend
15 July - 16 August 2008
Private view
Wednesday 16 July, 6-8 pm |
Mary Bauermeister
Mark Boyle & Joan Hills
Earle Brown
Sylvano Bussotti
Paul Caffell
John Cage
Alexander Calder
Nam June Paik
Peter Schmidt
Karlheinz
Stockhausen
'To Become Like Music' is an exhibition that explores
the close relationship between music and painting in the late
modernist period, 1945-1965, and examines the consequences for
art of that relation. It uses the work of Nam June Paik, Karlheinz
Stockhausen, Alexander Calder, Earle Brown and others to look
at a period of two decades when painters' engagement with music,
and musicians' engagement with the visual arts would transform
the languages of both arts.
The exhibition's title comes from the German philosopher Schopenhauer,
who suggested that to become like music was the aspiration of
every art. For modernist artists, no longer under an obligation
to represent the world realistically, that aspiration first
became manifest with abstract painting after 1910, especially
in the work of Kandinsky. But by the mid century, the world
had fundamentally changed and so too had the discourses with
which art and music approached it. Modernism's imperative to
make its subject out of the very language in which it depicted
that world led to an analysis that eventually exhausted the
rhetorical forms of representation. As confidence in visual
resources ran dry so it became clear that the modified languages
of other arts could be employed. One consequence of this is
the birth of performance art in the 1960s, especially in movements
such as Fluxus, which is seen here in its earliest stages, in
the collaborations of Nam June Paik, John Cage, Karlheinz Stockhausen,
Sylvano Bussotti and others, exhibiting and performing in the
atelier of the German painter Mary Bauermeister from the late
1950s on.
The activities of abstract painters were also of particular
interest to composers, who by the early 1950s had begun to doubt
the capacity of the formal, abstract language of musical scores
in much the same way as artists and writers had a few decades
before. Avant-garde composers such as the American Earle Brown,
inspired by the work of Alexander Calder, began to produce scores
that looked more like visual art than conventional notation,
and which often reflected close friendships and shared conceptual
interests between artists and musicians. If Rauschenberg's 'White
Paintings' of the early 1950s became the inspiration for Cage's
notorious 4'33" , we see here a number of other more
expressive projects in which a composer's instructions are transposed
into visual effects. Amongst these are two works by the Italian
composer Sylvano Bussotti, made in the early 1960s, Cage's score
for his Water Music (1952), and, in response, Mary
Bauermeister's Malerische Konzeption (1961), made for
Stockhausen.
One consequence of the expanded field of performance and music
that follows, especially, from Stockhausen's Originale (1961)
is the emergence of sound art, first in performance and then,
eventually, in installation. 'To Become Like Music' features
the work of the important British artist Peter Schmidt (1931-1980)
both as a painter and as a performer, experimenting with sound
art in live events. These days Schmidt is best remembered as
an illustrator of album covers for the British musician Brian
Eno, but he was one of the pioneers of sound art, and we are
lucky enough to have discovered and restored original tapes
of mid 1960s performances. At the same time the exhibition looks
at the collaborations of Mark Boyle and Joan Hills in making
projections in live performances, alongside Schmidt, and their
work with composers such as Cornelius Cardew and Annea Lockwood
who had emerged from periods of study in Köln and Darmstadt
with a fresh conception of what "classical" music could be,
how it could be performed, and what demands it should place
upon an audience.
The exhibition closes by looking at the renewed effect of the
new music on painting in the 1960s. Where modernist abstraction
had often sought to replicate the rhythmical effects of music
through pattern, in the wake of Schoenberg and Webern the new
emphasis on texture and the 'volatilising' of time, rather than
temporal progression, by avant-garde composers led to a new
approach to the visual. We see this in the work of two British
painters, Schmidt, and Paul Caffell, particularly affected by
early innovations in electronic music and, in Caffell's case,
by the compositions of Roberto Gerhard and Stockhausen. For
Caffell, still working in this vein today, the act of listening
precedes the act of painting, and the formal method of composition
in one medium becomes a model for another. Gerhard's Symphony
no. 3 ( Collages ) is exemplary here; Caffell still
speaks fondly of a work, first heard in the early 1960s, whose
structural procedures profoundly affected his own, then and
now.
'To Become Like Music' is a show that pays attention to a moment
in modernism's history that is often neglected as we attend
to the new artistic projects of the 1960s as if they emerged
ready formed. In this period all of art's languages were open
to question and became the subject of experiment and transposition.
The exhibition reflects the excitement at the possibility that
seemed to present itself to composers and artists alike in the
post-war era, that they might remake the very language of their
medium.
For enquiries, please contact
Andrew Mummery at: andrew@mummeryschnelle.com
or
Wolfram Schnelle at: wolfram@mummeryschnelle.com |







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