Luis Camnitzer
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Born in Lübeck, Germany in 1937. Lives and works in New York, NY.
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Two Parallel Lines
1976
Hand-written text on the wall, and objects. 50 x 1500 cm / Dimension variable Purchased in: 2008 |
Words and things. Two parallel, horizontal lines on the wall. One is made up of various found objects, lined up as if following one another: threads, adhesive tape, pieces of rope, bits of pencil, etc. The other, running 15 cm below, is a hand-written line, spelling out a succession of lapidary formulas which could serve as alternative titles for the work or its auto-commentaries. Acting both as footnotes and the formalization of thinking in progress, these poetico-philosophical fragments evoke in turn the horizon, the border, exclusion, trajectory, as well as platitude and death. Two parallel lines, one virtual and literary, the other real and plastic. Two lines parallel in space and in their very essence, but which never meet: words and things. Irreducible distance between the visual and the discursive, between the work and the theory. This hybrid piece epitomizes the singularity of the Uruguayan, U.S.-based artist Luis Camnitzer, which lies in a fundamental tension between the poetic and the conceptual. Indeed, tautology and self-referentiality are characteristic of conceptual art: an utterance taking place of form and a protocol that precludes the aura of a unique object (the phrase must be recopied on the wall and objects may vary with each exhibition). At the same time, the work preserves its discreet materiality, and its visual aspect derives partly from the Apollinairian calligramme which, in an inverse gesture of conceptual dematerialization, transforms writing into an object, into a figurative form. On the other hand, the artist plays humorously and ambiguously with one of the structural motifs of minimal art: the straight line. It is a spiritual and formal guide of modernity, symbolizing stability, truth, and rigor, as opposed to hesitation, contortion, and lie. As Sol LeWitt put it: “The drawing of a person is not a person, but the drawing of a line is a real line.” Camnitzer playfully subverts this ontological axiom. Guillaume Désanges |
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