Art of Limina: Gary Hill

Mar 21, 2009 - May 01, 2009
Slought Foundation, Philadelphia, is pleased to announce Art of Limina: Gary Hill. The exhibition will be on display in the Slought Foundation galleries from March 21-May 1, 2009 and is co-curated by George Quasha, Aaron Levy, and Osvaldo Romberg. The opening reception will take place on Saturday, March 21, 2009 from 6:30-8:30pm, with a public event beginning at 7pm in the galleries featuring poets/artists George Quasha and Charles Stein, authors of An Art of Limina: Gary Hill's Works and Writing (Ediciones Poligrafa, 2009; with a foreword by Lynne Cooke), in conversation with the artist about their new publication, which contributes to the "further life" of the artist's work within a critical/historical context. Gary Hill will also deliver a a public lecture about his work from 5-6:30pm on Tuesday, March 17 in Meyerson Hall B1 for the Department of Fine Arts, in the School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania (210 South 34th Street). Please note that seating is limited for these events and will be made available on a first-come, first-serve basis. These programs are made possible in part through the generous support of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Society of Friends of the Slought Foundation, and the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania. The exhibition at Slought Foundation is unique in that it will consist of new and reformulated installations by Gary Hill, many of which are being shown for the first time in a gallery exhibition context, and includes a rare showing of some of his early pieces. These include installations such as Wall Piece (2000), and Blind Spot (2003), and single-channel works such as Incidence of Catastrophe (1987-88). This selection foregrounds works that are less well known or understood that inform his more well known subsequent installations. This exhibition also features the world premiere of Figuring Grounds, a single-channel work which newly completes a 1985 event that Gary Hill undertook in collaboration with George Quasha and Charles Stein, and which is also featured in the publication. The exhibition also features the first showing in America of Up Against Down (2008). The work of artist Gary Hill is defined by a sensibility of openness, complexity and subtlety of language resembling what the poet Robert Duncan called an "open universe." Since the late 1970s, he has created poetic and fantastic works that involve a simultaneity of text and image, reconceptualizing the image as a sort of semiotic construction. This new anatomy of word and image is often produced through transparency effects and electronic techniques that bypass the typical reliance on collage in the work of video artists such as Nam Jun Paik. Gary Hill’s work is also notable for its conceptualist stance that emerges from a productive dialogue with technology. In his art, process, concept and method derive from the same operative principle in that the work is performative of its principle. The process is continuously emergent and open, therefore visually challenging and highly semanticized. Already, in 1980, Gary Hill had remarked that his works constitute "a kind of electronic linguistic," suggesting that he is an artist attentive to the sound of language. Indeed, he is an artist who has discovered a direct languaging function of even highly abstract electronic processes, both in the sudden emergence of speech-like sounds and in the liminal and quasi-semiotic configuration of live imaging. Due to the rich tonalities of sounds that happened to emerge from taut wire components, he increasingly gravitated away from metal sculpture--which is how his artistic practice first began--toward electronic tools that allowed for immediate playback, dialogue with created sounds, and the phenomenon of feedback. In works such as Processual Video, which he composed by "performing" the piece at the level of text-based language, Hill made a text in dialogue with a rotating line, then later recited the text in sync with video, first as actual performance and then as single-channel video. Over the years, Gary Hill has also migrated from a non-political stance to a more confrontational position that makes newly explicit reference to contemporary issues.
Slought Foundation, Philadelphia, is pleased to announce Art of Limina: Gary Hill. The exhibition will be on display in the Slought Foundation galleries from March 21-May 1, 2009 and is co-curated by George Quasha, Aaron Levy, and Osvaldo Romberg. The opening reception will take place on Saturday, March 21, 2009 from 6:30-8:30pm, with a public event beginning at 7pm in the galleries featuring poets/artists George Quasha and Charles Stein, authors of An Art of Limina: Gary Hill's Works and Writing (Ediciones Poligrafa, 2009; with a foreword by Lynne Cooke), in conversation with the artist about their new publication, which contributes to the "further life" of the artist's work within a critical/historical context. Gary Hill will also deliver a a public lecture about his work from 5-6:30pm on Tuesday, March 17 in Meyerson Hall B1 for the Department of Fine Arts, in the School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania (210 South 34th Street). Please note that seating is limited for these events and will be made available on a first-come, first-serve basis. These programs are made possible in part through the generous support of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Society of Friends of the Slought Foundation, and the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania. The exhibition at Slought Foundation is unique in that it will consist of new and reformulated installations by Gary Hill, many of which are being shown for the first time in a gallery exhibition context, and includes a rare showing of some of his early pieces. These include installations such as Wall Piece (2000), and Blind Spot (2003), and single-channel works such as Incidence of Catastrophe (1987-88). This selection foregrounds works that are less well known or understood that inform his more well known subsequent installations. This exhibition also features the world premiere of Figuring Grounds, a single-channel work which newly completes a 1985 event that Gary Hill undertook in collaboration with George Quasha and Charles Stein, and which is also featured in the publication. The exhibition also features the first showing in America of Up Against Down (2008). The work of artist Gary Hill is defined by a sensibility of openness, complexity and subtlety of language resembling what the poet Robert Duncan called an "open universe." Since the late 1970s, he has created poetic and fantastic works that involve a simultaneity of text and image, reconceptualizing the image as a sort of semiotic construction. This new anatomy of word and image is often produced through transparency effects and electronic techniques that bypass the typical reliance on collage in the work of video artists such as Nam Jun Paik. Gary Hill’s work is also notable for its conceptualist stance that emerges from a productive dialogue with technology. In his art, process, concept and method derive from the same operative principle in that the work is performative of its principle. The process is continuously emergent and open, therefore visually challenging and highly semanticized. Already, in 1980, Gary Hill had remarked that his works constitute "a kind of electronic linguistic," suggesting that he is an artist attentive to the sound of language. Indeed, he is an artist who has discovered a direct languaging function of even highly abstract electronic processes, both in the sudden emergence of speech-like sounds and in the liminal and quasi-semiotic configuration of live imaging. Due to the rich tonalities of sounds that happened to emerge from taut wire components, he increasingly gravitated away from metal sculpture--which is how his artistic practice first began--toward electronic tools that allowed for immediate playback, dialogue with created sounds, and the phenomenon of feedback. In works such as Processual Video, which he composed by "performing" the piece at the level of text-based language, Hill made a text in dialogue with a rotating line, then later recited the text in sync with video, first as actual performance and then as single-channel video. Over the years, Gary Hill has also migrated from a non-political stance to a more confrontational position that makes newly explicit reference to contemporary issues.

Contact details

By appointment only
Thursday - Saturday
1:00 - 6:00 PM
Art of Limina: Gary Hill Opening
January 01, 1900
6:30 - 8:30 PM
4017 Walnut Street University City - Philadelphia, PA, USA 19104
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