Larry Bell
18 Feb - 22 Mar 2014
© Larry Bell
SF 3.6.12, 2012
Vapour-coated mixed media collage on canvas backed paper
30 x 22 in. (76.2 x 55.9 cm) (unframed)
33 1/16 x 25 3/16 x 1 15/16 in. (84 x 64 x 5 cm) (framed)
SF 3.6.12, 2012
Vapour-coated mixed media collage on canvas backed paper
30 x 22 in. (76.2 x 55.9 cm) (unframed)
33 1/16 x 25 3/16 x 1 15/16 in. (84 x 64 x 5 cm) (framed)
LARRY BELL
The Carnival Series
18 February – 22 March 2014
‘The Carnival Series’ brought together a selection of work from past and present, including ten ‘Mirage works’ from the 1980s as well as a series of collage works on paper and ‘Light knots’ which are presented here for the very first time.
Bell began his career in the early 1960s when the American art scene was evolving away from Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art towards to Minimalism. Living on the West Coast Bell started out as a painter, but soon began making collages using glass and mirror, materials which he obtained from his daytime job at a frame shop. These assemblages led to a series of small ‘Shadow boxes’, sculptures which in turn evolved into the ‘Cube sculptures’. In making the partially reflective panes of these cubes, Bell discovered an industrial metallic coating process that could evenly powder a glass surface, a finish that could visually subvert a sculpture’s spatial volume and translucency. Bell pushed this technique one step further by acquiring his own vacuum deposition tank which enabled him to more harness and manipulate this fetishistic and inventive technique in his sculptures.
The ‘Mirage works’, created by layering found papers, films and applied acrylic paint, continue to play on themes of spatial ambiguity and illusion. Their form results not only from the interference of aluminium deposition on the surface of the materials but also on the further compression, absorption and adherence of the films to the canvas through a heated lamination process. This exhibition included Spider Web (1988), the first ‘Mirage work’, as well as important subsequent works Second Chance (1988) and Leon (1988), and paintings such as Chequered Demon #193 (1990) and The Vertical Landscape #192 (1990), which further experiment with materials, paint gestures and a brighter palette, taking on a greater level of complexity.
A series of ‘Figure collages’ (2008-10) or ‘The Mardi Gras’ or ‘Carnival series’ as Bell refers to them, are his most colourful and celebratory collages to date. They continue his return to the classical female form, where the seated figure is presented in a boldly ‘Pop’ manner – which the artist describes as ‘Carnival’, hence the title of the show which takes place during Carnival.
In the most recent collages Bell draws on the language of Cubism with montages that use cut sinuous outlines that resemble a female figure or perhaps the inwardly curving shape of a guitar, poised between abstraction and figuration. Bell has repeated these forms in three graceful suspended ‘Light Knot’ sculptures, cut from Mylar, a polyester film, coated on both sides to create a dark reflective surface. Bell then twists and ties the film into a knot, creating a multi-dimensional kinetic form that constantly reflects and refracts the ever-changing natural light in the surrounding space.
Larry Bell lives and works between Los Angeles and Taos, New Mexico. He has shown extensively across the United States with museum solo exhibitions at Pasadena Art Museum, California (1972); Oakland Museum of Art, California (1973); Fort Worth Art Museum, Dallas, Texas (1975 and 1977); Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri (1976); Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan (1982); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1986); Denver Art Museum, Colorado (1995) and Albuquerque Museum, New Mexico (1997). More recent solo exhibitions include Kunstmuseum Bergen, Norway, which toured to Reykjavik Municipal Art Museum, Iceland(1998) and a survey exhibition at the Carré d’Art Musée d’art Contemporain de Nimes, France (2011). In 2012 Bell was included in the Getty Center’s major exhibition ‘Pacific Standard Time: Art in LA 1945-1980’, part of a state-wide celebration of the West Coast contemporary art scene from the 1960s onwards. In October 2014 the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas will curate an exhibition dedicated to his large glass installations.
The Carnival Series
18 February – 22 March 2014
‘The Carnival Series’ brought together a selection of work from past and present, including ten ‘Mirage works’ from the 1980s as well as a series of collage works on paper and ‘Light knots’ which are presented here for the very first time.
Bell began his career in the early 1960s when the American art scene was evolving away from Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art towards to Minimalism. Living on the West Coast Bell started out as a painter, but soon began making collages using glass and mirror, materials which he obtained from his daytime job at a frame shop. These assemblages led to a series of small ‘Shadow boxes’, sculptures which in turn evolved into the ‘Cube sculptures’. In making the partially reflective panes of these cubes, Bell discovered an industrial metallic coating process that could evenly powder a glass surface, a finish that could visually subvert a sculpture’s spatial volume and translucency. Bell pushed this technique one step further by acquiring his own vacuum deposition tank which enabled him to more harness and manipulate this fetishistic and inventive technique in his sculptures.
The ‘Mirage works’, created by layering found papers, films and applied acrylic paint, continue to play on themes of spatial ambiguity and illusion. Their form results not only from the interference of aluminium deposition on the surface of the materials but also on the further compression, absorption and adherence of the films to the canvas through a heated lamination process. This exhibition included Spider Web (1988), the first ‘Mirage work’, as well as important subsequent works Second Chance (1988) and Leon (1988), and paintings such as Chequered Demon #193 (1990) and The Vertical Landscape #192 (1990), which further experiment with materials, paint gestures and a brighter palette, taking on a greater level of complexity.
A series of ‘Figure collages’ (2008-10) or ‘The Mardi Gras’ or ‘Carnival series’ as Bell refers to them, are his most colourful and celebratory collages to date. They continue his return to the classical female form, where the seated figure is presented in a boldly ‘Pop’ manner – which the artist describes as ‘Carnival’, hence the title of the show which takes place during Carnival.
In the most recent collages Bell draws on the language of Cubism with montages that use cut sinuous outlines that resemble a female figure or perhaps the inwardly curving shape of a guitar, poised between abstraction and figuration. Bell has repeated these forms in three graceful suspended ‘Light Knot’ sculptures, cut from Mylar, a polyester film, coated on both sides to create a dark reflective surface. Bell then twists and ties the film into a knot, creating a multi-dimensional kinetic form that constantly reflects and refracts the ever-changing natural light in the surrounding space.
Larry Bell lives and works between Los Angeles and Taos, New Mexico. He has shown extensively across the United States with museum solo exhibitions at Pasadena Art Museum, California (1972); Oakland Museum of Art, California (1973); Fort Worth Art Museum, Dallas, Texas (1975 and 1977); Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri (1976); Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan (1982); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1986); Denver Art Museum, Colorado (1995) and Albuquerque Museum, New Mexico (1997). More recent solo exhibitions include Kunstmuseum Bergen, Norway, which toured to Reykjavik Municipal Art Museum, Iceland(1998) and a survey exhibition at the Carré d’Art Musée d’art Contemporain de Nimes, France (2011). In 2012 Bell was included in the Getty Center’s major exhibition ‘Pacific Standard Time: Art in LA 1945-1980’, part of a state-wide celebration of the West Coast contemporary art scene from the 1960s onwards. In October 2014 the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas will curate an exhibition dedicated to his large glass installations.