Series 3:
Bi-, Tri-dimensional dialectics
1980-1981
I rounded off the previous series with a painting in
which the white was the untouched fabric (though previously
sealed on the back) framed by a yellow plane. Here I approached
the concepts Malevich expounded in his painting White on
white, as I painted two vertical lines in white on the white
fabric. Dramatically, I had been left “with no paint to paint”,
with the fabric untouched and host of concepts to explore.
In this series, the only paint I used was the color
white, white canvases of different thicknesses, many of them
transparent, white lacquered wood … and two basic concepts,
one being the pure transparency of the fabric or paper in
opposition to the saturation of the material (layers and layers
of sandpapered white paint) and the other, the construction
of the tri-dimension from the bi-dimension. In other words,
my fi rst sculpture was a simple wooden stretcher of the sort
used for painting, with fabric tensed on it on both sides, one
of them saturated with paint and a small circular incision to
enable the interior space of the sculpture to communicate with
its exterior space. My intention was to construct a sculpture–tridimension–
with the same object normally used for a painting–
bi-dimension–and to relate interior and exterior space.
Around that time, interest in the works of Basque
sculptors Oteiza and Chillida, and some profound analyses and
theoretical studies of the concepts of space and the neutral,
added even more emphasis to my burgeoning curiosity about
the conceptual and minimalist world. Most of the works were
executed on transparent or thick fabrics on stretchers, painted,
or not painted, white; many are of white lacquered Much of
what I wanted to do in this series was left undone, even as line
drawings, of simple, often geometric forms in space. Another
project that never saw the light of day and which I regret not
getting done is a sculpture in “Homage to Rothko”, whichwould have involved placing at certain calculated distances
vertical planes of stretched white canvas fabrics with selected
degrees of transparency.
Series 3a Gallery - Series 3b Gallery
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