“The beautiful circle
hangs down in a pitiful way.”
François
Morellet
Humor
is never very far away from the work of the French geometrical abstract artist François Morellet. As he told Museum Ritter’s
Gerda Ridler “It seems to me that humor, irony, derision
and frivolity are the necessary spice to make squares, systems and all the rest
of it digestible.”
Best known for his imaginative use of neon in both his
paintings and installations, Morellet investigates the confines of a space
through the rigorous application of predetermined rules and principals based
upon the abstract inherent in pure mathematics like the number ‘n’ and its relationship
to its arithmetic counterpart. Albeit the element of chance is not eliminated
as it is the beautiful aesthetic rather than the ideology for which Morellet
strives. As he says “I’m no great
fan of serious, didactic art.”
For, Morellet maintains
it is the spectator that brings the meaning to a work of art, not the artist.
As he told the Wall
Street Journal "My theory is that I
am merely there to prepare the terrain for the spectator's 'picnic.' When
confronted by a work of art, it is up to the spectator to eat what he's brought
along. Too bad if he's brought nothing with him."
A sentiment confirmed by Artslant’s
Frances Guerin,
who wrote in her review of Morellet’s Centre Pompidou 2011 exhibition Réinstallations,
“Morellet’s pieces invite us to
participate in their process, and then when we do so, pressing buttons that
activate multiple neon lights usually forming some kind of right angle
compositions, we are given the illusion of full control of the speed of their blinking,
and apparently the patterns they make. I found myself energetically
turning the lights on and off, watching the patterns to the point of dizziness
and disorientation. And as if this were not enough in itself, what then makes
Morellet’s work unique is that, at heart, it has all the seriousness and
intellectual profundity of various touchstones in the history of twentieth
century art. And so here is a corpus of work that pushes us to physical
extremes, while all the time being appealing to the eye, and challenging to the
mind.”
Morellet’s latest exhibition DASH DASH DASH is currently on
show at Berlin’s Blain|Southern
until the 1st of August.
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