This is the abstract and introduction to the thesis I wrote as part of my masters at NCAD in 2012. If anyone would like to read the completed thesis, contact me and I would be happy to e-mail you a copy.
Abstract
Of my research in colour theory most publications tend to forewarn the reader of the multiple, scattered and often contradictory observations made by artists, scientists, philosophers, psychologists, anthropologists and so on with regard to the nature of colour and its discourses. Instead of positioning myself within a purely scientific, anthropological, or philosophical location I wish to focus my investigations within the visual arts in relation to the work of Brazilian artist Oiticica (1937 –1980) and his radical theories on the nature of colour.
Oiticica considered colour to be a fully autonomous system that had remained far too long subordinated to pictorial support. Using the theories of the Neo-Concrete movement and of French philosopher Henri Bergson, Oiticica conceived colour as having its own spatial and temporal dimension, appreciated only when released from the plane and liberated in space, to the point where colour is no longer subordinated to the surface, ‘it tends to embody itself...it creates its own structure and the work becomes the body of color’ (Ramírez 2007, pp.20-34). Oiticica makes the case for an acceptance of the autonomy and living quality of colour through a dissection of the meaning of colour, time, structure and space within and around an artwork. Through a sensorial engagement with a work of art, Oiticica argues further that when art is placed within a metaphysical framework and becomes entirely free of representation, it will achieve the highest goal of absolute transcendence. The aim of this thesis is to fully understand how Oiticica can locate colour as an entity existing autonomously free from form. how can Oiticica’s chromatic experiments assist spectators of a work of art in a phenomenological engagement with the reality of the world, and what new perspective can Oiticica’s theories offer on the position of colour in twentieth century art?
Introduction
‘Colour deceives continuously’
Josef Albers
It
is the relationship with colour that most interests me in the work of Hélio
Oiticica, in particular his concept of colour as having the potential to embody
itself, becoming an autonomous structure. He considered colour to be a fully
autonomous system that had remained far too long subordinated to pictorial
support. Oiticica conceived of colour as having its own spatial and temporal
dimension, appreciated only when released from the plane and liberated in
space, to the point where colour is no longer subordinated to the surface; ‘it
tends to embody itself...it creates its own structure and the work becomes the
body of colour.’ (Ramírez, 2007, pp.20-34) Oiticica makes the case that, through the
acceptance of the living quality of colour, man can fully understand the true
nature of living reality. By liberating colour from the plane, from
representation, one can re-imagine notions of time, space and structure. And,
furthermore, colour for the artist serves as a springboard, a means of
connecting oneself to that which Oiticica perceived to be the true reality existing
within an eternal moment; the transcendental; existence itself, beyond fixed
notions of form and structure, time and space. This is my reasoning for an
interest focused solely on Oiticica’s ideas as opposed to the equally
subjective and continuous chromatic experiments that Joseph Albers undertook.
My
argument is that while many colour theorists have presented popular and well
regarded theories as to the meaning and function of colour, Oiticica goes
further than most, employing colour in a way that tries to fuse the gap between
art and life, a means of getting closer to the real sensation of
being-in-the-world, to truly embody the reality of the lived experience.
Oiticica viewed art as ‘one of pinnacles of man’s spiritual fulfillment [and]
it should be approached as such, otherwise misinterpretations are inevitable’
(Ramirez, 2007, p.223) It is no coincidence therefore that he was seduced by
the writings and work of his contemporaries Mário Pedrosa, Ferreira Gullar, his
long time friend Lygia Clark and the theories of French philosopher Henri
Bergson and later, Maurice Merleau-Ponty. It is not
surprising that Oiticica would be attracted to a branch of philosophy which
placed the body as the centre of knowledge and experience. Oiticica navigates
between his desire to understand the nature of colour and an awakening of the
viewer to his or her bodily sensations and the existing relationship of the
body to colour. In this visceral philosophy, through a sensorial engagement one
can realize the existence, in and of itself, of elements previously tied to
representation and the pictorial plane. By manipulating the experience of
colour through his installations, Oiticica was able to affect each participant
and remind him or her of the universality of the physical body through the
activation of the senses. Because of the insistence on the body as the location
of sensory experience and the interest in the temporal dimension of time and
space, Bergson and Merleau-Ponty serve as important reference points throughout
this thesis. Oiticica’s studies of colour were closely aligned with his
desire for people to physically and mentally engage with his art. His experiments
required the active participation of the public and were accompanied by
theoretical elaborations, through commentaries, texts and poems.
Hélio Oiticica
was an artist whose production and career were highlighted by an experimental
and innovative drive to investigate art as the human articulation of life and
sensation. His work approached and handled numerous areas of modern art
movements, interconnecting varied elements and questions regarding concerns
such as art’s relation and communion with life, the duality of the object and
the subject, the role of the body, political, sexual and cultural identities
and the function of colour and representation. His work has pursued an
articulation of sensuous engagement through art of the reality of existing
presently. Associated with the Neo-Concrete
movement in Brazil in the 1950’s, Oiticica’s artworks encompass some of the
major strands of Modern art found in many of the movements celebrated in
Eurocentric art historical narratives. In most ways the work and writings of Hélio
Oiticica and his contemporaries anticipated many of the concerns that would
preoccupy the Minimalist movement in the U.S. Oiticica’s prolific body of work
featured elements of Constructivism, Abstraction, Minimalism and Conceptualism
along with political, bodily, participatory and installation practices.
Oiticica’s
fixation with and studious explorations of colour can be mapped extensively
throughout his oeuvre, from his childhood studies of pigments with his father
through the work exhibited with Grupo Frente (a movement that took
Constructivism as its theoretical framework, based in Brazil in the 1950s) and
gathering momentum through the Relevo Especial
(Spatial Reliefs), wooden, free-floating structures comprising of angled
reliefs which disrupt the perception of colour,
Bólides; monochrome painted wood
boxes, equipped with sliding doors and drawers,
often holding caches of bright pigments, sand and fabrics allowing a
participant to feel colour, and the Grande Nuclei; complex angled
paintings in space, through which colour dictates the overall support
and structure. Finally his sensorial studies reach climax in the parangoles, a series of coloured, textured capes designed to be worn by
participants and activated through the manipulation of fabric and pigment,
movement and dance. These artworks seek to invoke a
physical response and engage the senses of sight and touch designed to
be worn by the participant. The parangoles, for Oiticica were the actualisation of ‘embodied’
colour in temporal movement
In
the first chapter I will give a broad overview of the theories, theorists,
artists and cultural instances which complemented, shaped and helped to articulate
Oiticica’s interest in dissolving the pictorial plane and a theory of the
non-object. All of which would help to set the framework for Oiticica’s own
theoretical writings regarding the potential of colour to exist freely. I will reference the vital assertions of critic
and writer Mario Pedrosa and the writings of poet Ferreira Gullar and his Theory of the Non-Object, and Oiticica’s
involvement in the Neo-Concrete group,
one which found its roots in the European abstract movement of Concrete art. The term was proposed by Theo van
Doesburg in Paris in 1931. The artists associated with the movement can be
linked together through their collective adherence to abstraction derived from
the simplification of form and mathematical rigor. In the Concrete Manifesto van Doesburg maintained that;
A
work of art does not derive from nature but is an autonomous reality composed
of colour and form, an object for intellectual and spiritual use, [Art ]should
receive nothing from nature's formal properties or from sensuality or
sentimentality...
With a brief analysis of Oiticica’s
involvement with such figures and movements of the Brazilian avant garde, we
can understand the difficult journey away from pictorial representation and the
cleansing of colour from such constraints as the flat two dimensional surface.
The early works of the Sêcos (1956-57) and Metasequemas (1957-58) exhibited with
the Grupo Frente along with a brief
description of the successful chromatic experiments
of Oiticica’s Invecoes series will be examined in this context.
In chapter two I will look more closely at the
phenomenological writings and aspects of his work more closely and how this
might help the understanding of his work. Along with the artists theoretical
writings Color, Time, and Structure
(1960) and The Transition of Color from the Painting into Space and the Meaning
of Construction (1962) I will examine the importance of Henri Bergson in The Creative Mind, Introduction to
Metaphysics(1912) and Matter and Memory(1911) Maurice Merleau-
Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception
(1960) also accounted for an
influence on the Brazilian avant garde of the nineteen-sixties and provided
some theoretical credence for Oiticica’s account of colour, space, structure
and time. I will examine closely the series of Relevo Especial (Spatial Reliefs) and Bólides (Fire boxes) and the necessity of the colour red in
providing the optimal phenomenological encounter.
In
chapter three I will interrogate an anxiety that I see as enveloping the work
of this exceptional artist. He was an artist who believed in art as
experiential as opposed to solely being an articulation of ideas. He tries to
overcome a theory of forms, the object and representation by presenting states
and realities that are formless, unrepresentable, ephemeral, moments to be
consumed, while at the same time heavily theorising his work and name-checking
Bergson and Merleau-Ponty. Art precedes theories of art. What we see in the art
of Oiticica is the collapsing of binary, dualistic concepts of subject- object
and the liberation of art from the shackles of representation. Paradoxically,
he creates visceral, sensorial experiences beyond theoretical speculation while
presenting them within the conceptual frameworks of traditional Western
intellectual tropes, thus re-invoking the binary concepts he seeks to subvert.
In
chapter four I will look at the accumulation and success of his colour
investigations accumulating in the parangolés, which seek to invoke a physical response and engage the senses of
sight and touch. These capes served the actual
embodiment and free movement of colour, the penultimate sensorial engagement
with the body. I will present what I perceive to be the most radical aspect of
Oiticica’s ideas and the challenge presented to his viewers, namely a
reclaiming of art as the key to unlocking the sublime and the assertion that,
through an engagement with colour a new reality of time and space presents
itself. Colour becomes a springboard onto which one can reach the metaphysical
plane.
Within
the conclusion, rather than trying to resolve all of the elements in
discussion, this thesis will attempt to juxtapose these numerous tensions and
questions in a contemporary context. For example, why do the artists
articulations regarding colour not appear to be as popular as the equally
careful investigations carried out by Johann Wolfgang Goethe or the
‘practice before theory’ articulations of Albers (Albers, 2006, p.1). Could
this be due to the insistence upon the subjective, sensorial, romantic and
(possibly) outmoded view of art as holding the key to transcendental reality?
Is it a result of Oiticica’s ideas being rooted in a phenomenological
exploration tied to the early ninteenth century? Is it because of a tendency in art history to
focus upon a European and U.S dialogue? Until very recently little exploration
had taken place within his work to the great emphasis he placed in the specific
meaning and integral part that colour took part in the structure of his
artworks. Is the revival of interest in his work and that of other Brazilian
avant-garde artists a result of the popularity of participatory and
installation-based work which is still at forefront of contemporary discussions
of art-making, and can trace their roots of this movement back to the practices
of Clark and Oiticica? Has all the discussion regarding the end of art
blossomed new interest in the current trend of looking back and re-theorising
art from the sixties and seventies?
Perhaps,
in a world where the most significant and lauded artists are those whose work
is both an embodiment and perpetuation of the primal power of economics and
money, it is time to re-examine the visceral, spiritually-yearning,
formally-challenging, conceptually-intriguing work of an artist such as Hélio
Oiticica. His reflections on colour are not abstract musings on a world safely
contained in the world of detached post-modernity, but the active invocation of
an alternative way. We must consider Oiticica’s reflections as offering an
alternative way of articulating the visual world and the potential of an
artwork to free both the viewer and the object presented from fixed notions of
representation, meaning and place in time.
Fascinating and resonates with my feelings as a visual artist. Thank-you :) I would like to read your whole thesis but I cannot see a way to contact you.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the comment. You can email me at avril.dowling@gmail.com and I will be happy to send it on to you
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