Gareth Long — Four Stories

Exhibition

Mixed media

Gareth Long
Four Stories

Past: June 9 → July 16, 2011

The exhibition features four works from Long’s Untitled (Stories), a series of nine lenticular prints and a collection of books that reference the work of the late American author J.D. Salinger.

In much of his previous work, Long has explored processes of translation and the cross-transference of artistic forms as a means to question authorship and the mechanisms of cultural and knowledge production. Frequently, these explorations lead to a revised understanding of Modernism as it relates to artistic and literary traditions.

In Untitled (Stories), he focuses on the book cover design that was created by American publishers Little Brown & Co. for Salinger’s books. This discreet design has become iconic in America and instantly brings to mind Salinger’s œuvre as a writer. Featuring a diagonal rainbow running along the corner of the book’s cover, it is strongly reminiscent of the “stripe motif” that was ubiquitous in Modernist painting at the time when Salinger was writing, particularly in the works of painters such as Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland and Bridget Riley.

In spite of this synonymy, Gareth Long’s interest lies in a disconnection between the covers’ design and Salinger’s œuvre as a writer. The motif was, in fact, first used on the cover of the books in 1991, long after they were published, and its after-the-fact lucid modernist aesthetic is incongruent with many aspects of Salinger’s style as a writer. For example, Salinger’s sometimes fragmented and meta-fictive narratives, and his introduction of metaphysical themes have been identified as signaling a departure from modernist literary conventions.

It is this misalignment that becomes the basis of Untitled (Stories). While they retain the exact aspect ratio of the books, Long’s large-scale prints amplify and distort the design, both drawing out and twisting its references to Modernism, in particular the history of abstract painting, facets of Minimalism and Op Art.

His use of lenticular technology is a key point. In this technique, a number of small lenses produce images with an illusion of depth, or the ability to move as the image is viewed from different angles. Long condenses more than thirty frames of video or animation into a single picture plane; as the viewer walks around the prints, the works animate, shift and slip between images.

Reminiscent of the Cracker Jack prizes that one finds in cereal packets, or kitschy posters for the latest blockbuster movie, the lenticular is not a form that invokes high cultural associations. Rather than employing it as a gimmick, however, Long harnesses its shifting optical effects to conjure the emotional turbulence of Salinger’s stories and to complicating any modernist narratives.

While high Modernism called for autonomy and purity of form, Long’s prints are contiguous and impure objects. They dissolve into movement as soon as we turn our heads and shift between media, suggesting, but never quite conforming to sculpture, painting and the moving image. They also recall the activity of reading. The repetitive movements one makes to activate the frames when viewing the prints are similar to leafing through the pages of a book.

Alongside the prints, the artist displays original copies of the Little Brown & Co published books. On the recto and verso, the cover of each book is erased. Only the iconic stripes remain. With this simple gesture, he underlines the slippage between the exterior’s muted design and the content within.

  • Opening Thursday, June 9, 2011 4 PM → 9 PM
Torri Gallery
Map Map
03 Le Marais Zoom in 03 Le Marais Zoom out

7, rue Saint-Claude

75003 Paris

T. 01 40 27 00 32

www.galerietorri.com

Saint-Sébastien – Froissart

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 11 AM – 7 PM

The artist

  • Gareth Long