Tag Archives: colour


Memphis Group

memphisgroupradiator

A radiator designed by the Memphis Group.


E-1027

E1027-le-corbusier-mural

Le Corbusier painting a mural on Eileen Gray‘s E-1027 house.

While staying as a guest in the house in 1938 and 1939, Le Corbusier painted bright murals on its plain white walls, sometimes while nude. Infuriated, Gray considered this a defacing of her work and deemed the murals outright vandalism.

Whether he painted his murals out of admiration for Gray’s work or out of jealousy of her accomplishment we still don’t know.


Mary Jacobus

“Hubert Damisch’s study, A Theory of /Cloud/ (1972), makes /cloud/ the sign of painting’s paradoxical combination of the ephemeral and the material. Above all, it signals the escape of painting from the dominance of perspective and its historical transformation; the problem of surface became the problem of illusion. By the use of two forward slashes, Damisch transforms /cloud / into an index or signifier, rather than a word denoting “cloud” in any descriptive or figurative sense. Enslaved to linear perspective (so Damisch argues), painting seeks another way of representing visual experience. /Cloud/, whether rendered as the absence of sky or as deceptive trompe l’oeil, poses an alternative to the linear order. It becomes a sign of all that painting has to overcome. Instead of organizing the limits of a flat surface, the illusionistic clouds of the painted baroque cupola overflow their architectural frame. Correggio, according to Damisch, was the first to construct his pictures from the point of view of a Kantian subject for whom space is a constitutive aspect of consciousness.

Damisch’s semiotic analysis of pictorial production takes the theme and texture of /cloud/ as an indexical case-study for the development of painting, making /cloud/ the defining problematic of painting from the baroque to the present day. This “pictorial” or “painterly” space – what he calls “a free and unlimited depth, considered as a luminous and aerial substance” – is opposed to a modernist emphasis on linear style, with its flatness and overlapping forms. /Cloud/ is the sign of the volume repressed by modern painting’s fixation on the flatness of the representational surface. Its semiotics challenge the insistence of twentieth-century modernism on the representation of painterly space. Clouds round out pictorial space instead of flattening it; they point to the organization of the pictorial as a dialectic of surface and depth. /Cloud/ negates solidity and shape. Nebulous and indefinite, it signals an indeterminate volume, defying the medium and restoring painting to the realm of illusion. But /cloud/ also contains the paradox of form which signifies itself.”

From: ‘Cloud Studies: The Visible Invisible’, by Mary Jacobus


Bethan Huws

bethan_huws_African Sculpture, 2006 Chocolate cast

Bethan Huws, ‘African Sculpture’ (2006)

Chocolate cast.


Peter Coffin

‘Alphabet Rainbow’ (2014) by Peter Coffin.


Chris Brans

chrisbrans-wolk

‘Wolk (Cloud)’ (2009) by Chris Brans.


John Smith

johnsmith-dadsstick

‘Dad’s Stick’ (2012) by John Smith.

“Dad’s Stick features three well-used objects that my father showed me shortly before he died. Two of these were so steeped in history that their original forms and functions were almost completely obscured.” Watch extract on vimeo:


Walter Swennen

01-walter_swennen_bras_d-honneur_2003

Walter Swennen, ‘Bras d’Honneur’ (2003)


David Stjernholm

david_stjernholm_Vase, 2013  Canon laser cartridge (magenta), pigment, altering flower

David Stjernholm, ‘Vase’ (2013)

Canon laser cartridge (magenta), pigment, ageing flower.


Peter Campus

‘Three transitions’ (1973)  by Peter Campus