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CONTEXTS

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Anish Kapoor

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Anish Kapoor’s sometimes vast catoptric sculptures allow the viewer to enter “into a warped dimension of fluid space”, the disorientating experience of which question’s our perception of reality1. Looking into his most famous public work, Cloud Gate (2004), the viewer is confronted with a monumental convexed distortion of metropolitan Chicago.  

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Another, even more extreme example of Kapoor’s exploration with reflective surfaces is Tall Tree and the Eye (2009), which presents the viewer with a netherworld of fragmented, warped reflections that defy easy definition in our normal visual encounters.  

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These types of works are of interest to me as I am also playing with imagery that involves refraction and warped perspective. While the artist’s work is concerned with many other complex dialogues surrounding the object and viewer that does not necessarily intersect with my own, the work puts “emphasis on the transience of appearances and the instability of the visible world”2. This latter part, combined with the notion that it makes ”possible for us to experience the spectacle of the fragmentation of ourselves” resonates with the more expressive themes that run through my projection drawings. I am hoping to convey something of the ”fragmentation” abounding from my own psychotic experiences in the past. Psychosis creates a situation in which the familiar often becomes strange and the perception of the world warped, in what should be ordinary and the everyday. By finding a means of exploration using distorted forms and automatic drawing, I hope to make sense of the experience as a form of catharsis.  

Kapoor’s sophisticated means of fabrication, including using digital software to even direct where the reflections will lie on his convex and concave surfaces, has suggested to me that I should research more thoroughly reflective surfaces. I wish to go further into the materiality and intellectual thinking behind it. Kapoor’s sophisticated ideas concerning colour are also something I wish to further research. 

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Foot Notes

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  1. Anish Kapoor, Baume, N., Boston, A. and Al, E. (2008). Anish Kapoor : past, present, future: [exhibition] Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston p18

  2. Anish Kapoor, Bhabha, H.K., Jean De Loisy, Rosenthal, N., Museo Guggenheim (Bilbao and Academy, R. (2010). Anish Kapoor : [exposición]. Madrid: Turner, D.L. 

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Tall Tree and the Eye (2009).jpg
cloud gate.jpg
Anish Kapoor, Cloud Gate, Stainless steel, 10x20x12.8 m, Milllennium Park, Chicago, USA (2004)
Anish Kapoor, Tall Tree and The Eye, Stainless steel, Stainless steel
13×5×5 metres, Guggenheim, Bilbao 2010
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