Joseph
Nechvatal's
nOise
anusmOs
by
Yuting Zou
***
nOise
anusmOs
Galerie Richard 514 West 24th Street New York City
http://www.galerierichard.com/
APRIL 12 Ð MAY 26, 2012
"Given the expansive, ecstatic, non-hierarchical
impression of the work, the unity of the microscopic and the macroscopic
culminates in oneÕs mindscape as that of the infinitely small and the
infinitely large, reflecting essentially the Leibnizian fractal view of the
infinite"
Joseph
Nechvatal, sOuth pOle, 2011. Computer-robotic
assisted acrylic on canvas 44" by 66" in.
ÒThe task of perception entails pulverizing the world, but
also one of spiritualizing its dust.Ó - G. Deleuze
Black is immanent to itself; it is the color of undivided
nothingness that has yet to be penetrated by light. Upon entering Galerie
Richard, black was my instant impression of Joseph Nechvatal's nOise anusmOs, for
most of his new paintings are unified by a black background. Against the black
backdrop are intricate and complex webs of red and white, suggestive of
provocative corporeal surfaces. Here, sfumato plays a role in reducing the
contrast of colors by adding a smoky and subtle layer to the otherwise
pixelated images. The entire room is filled with immersive noise, from the
visual noise (digital virus) inside the pictorial frame to its audial extension
into the ambient space through the viral symphOny.
Bathed in a continuity of noise, it seemed that overall, the composition of
this body of work was more sparse than before, and more speculative.
On the black canvases, the potencies of color start to
unfold. Each painting is an autonomy of the inside, and it records the life of
the tiny automata Ð artificial viruses. Those automata are equipped with sensory
systems that allow them to perceive their local environment, detect enemies,
and react accordingly. While, in most of the artist's previous works, the
macroscopic corporeality is deconstructed by the microscopic into visible or
invisible traces, the majority of this new series reverse the scheme; the
microscopic is used to generate the macroscopic, the cosmological. The
artificial viruses are creative agents that resemble Leibnizian monads Ð simple
substances that are living mirrors of the entire universe, projections of a
phantasmagorical phenomenon, and each an indivisible autonomous enclosure of
infinite minute perceptions. A cluster of viruses start from an indiscernibly
close vicinity, with almost indistinguishable perceptions, then form infinitesimal
differential relations, and unfold the color pixels underneath their paths. As
time goes by, the integration of minuscule differentials gives way to a
perceivable image: the human anus (or retina) and the black hole (or wormhole).
As such, through the virusesÕ own mild (confused) perceptions, their vibrating
trajectories become a filter for a distinct perception towards a threshold of
consciousness. This process is captured into an actualized work of art.
Under dim lighting, the gallery room simulates a universal
theater, where various media coexist to form an assemblage of many art forms Ð
the electronic viral symphOny, computer-robotic assisted
acrylic on canvas, video animations, and a projection. Nonetheless, the
mixed-media unity is a mind-boggling one, a mixture of mystery and indecency.
Joseph
Nechvatal, madOnna cOl bambinO, 2011. Computer-robotic
assisted acrylic on canvas 44" by 66" in.
The typical strategy of NechvatalÕs art works is to invoke
Òan infliction of a pleasant frustration that can lead to creative
visualization,Ó which can also be observed from the audienceÕs reaction. Unlike
his previous style that is characterized by overlapping two incomparable strata
of the actual and the virtual, this time, the actual human retina, anus, or
cosmological singularities, are progressively weaved into the fabric of the
virtual noise, resulting in an emergent ÒviractualÓ (a term coined by the
artist). It is a pleasure to see how these strands of virtual particles move on
to unfold the tapestries that depict the moment of creation. However, they
diverge quickly, lose their way in the labyrinth of the black chaosmos, and
have only a brief existence from the undifferentiated black, back to black.
Perhaps, all this echoes with what Francois Laurelle says, Ò(t)he World is the
endless confusion of man and Universe.Ó
Given the expansive, ecstatic, non-hierarchical impression of
the work, the unity of the microscopic and the macroscopic culminates in oneÕs
mindscape as that of the infinitely small and the infinitely large, reflecting
essentially the Leibnizian fractal view of the infinite: I did
not definitely assert that there are infinitely many degrees of infinities; I
merely made certain conjectures, by virtue of which I deemed this to be
possible, and indeed probable. My main reason was that there is no reason why
God should have willed the existence only of this degree of infinity or order
of magnitude, which constitutes our objects, proportioned to our intellects. I
can easily conceive that, in the smallest particle of dust, there can exist a
world, in which all things have the same relative proportions as in this large
world; and, on the other hand, that our world might be nothing but a particle
of dust in another, infinitely larger world. This way of conceiving things can
be continued upwards and downwards indefinitely.
Joseph Nechvatal, blackeye, 2010.
Computer-robotic assisted acrylic on canvas and screen with digital animation
screen, 20 x 20 in.
***
published at NYARTS Magazine
http://www.nyartsmagazine.com/reviewed/joseph-nechvatal-s-noise-anusmos