Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

Hot Chunky ‘Concrete’ with Incandescent ‘Crystals’

AA
View Discussion
Jan Albers: suntOOth, 2021, bronze, 80 x 40 x 10 cm; rEdEdgE, 2023, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm Jan Albers: suntOOth, 2021, detail, bronze, 80 x 40 x 10 cm Jan Albers; rEdEdgE, 2023, detail, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm Jan Albers: rEdrumblE, 2023, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm; mAkingbreAkingbAd, 2023, spray paint, concrete and steel, 40 x 30 x 20 cm Jan Albers, mAkingbreAkingbAd, 2023, spray paint, concrete and steel, 40 x 30 x 20 cm Jan Albers: lEgrandpEtit, 2023, bronze, 40 x 30 x 30 cm; rEdrumblE, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm Jan Albers: sOmekindOfblushing, 2023, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm;  lEgrandpEtit, 2023, bronze, 40 x 30 x 30 cm Jan Albers: sOmekindOfblushing, 2023, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm Jan Albers: sOmekindOfblushing, 2023, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm Jan Albers, lEgrandpEtit, 2023, bronze, 40 x 30 x 30 cm Side view of Jan Albers: lEgrandpEtit, 2023, bronze, 40 x 30 x 30 cm Jan Albers, sOlarmOlar, 2018, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 130 x 130 x 26 cm Jan Albers, hokuSaiSunriSe, 2023, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 170 x 120 cm Jan Albers: grEEdygrEEn, 2021, spray paint on polystyrene and wood in acrylic glass box, 251 x 171 x 20 cm; uPstEpstEp, 2021, cast resin, 40 x 30x 20 cm Jan Albers, uPstEpstEp, 2021, cast resin, 40 x 30x 20 cm

There is also another type of wall relief work in his current shows, one less machinic and without the hints of Vasarely—but still vaguely gridded. Though focussing on colour and more holistic, it uses weightless blocks of polystyrene to simulate the textures of oozy, rough, pock-marked concrete, sometimes diagonally cut into to form dramatic angled lines. These bulky forms also are visually hot, but the glowing chroma, because of the polystyrene texture, hints at more than mere light. It suggests the artwork is itself on fire internally, a giant throbbing incandescent ember that is astoundingly overheated within.

Auckland

 

Jan Albers
rEdEdgE


18 July - 19 August 2023

The Düsseldorf artist, Jan Albers, has been exhibiting with Fox Jensen McCory for at least five years now. He is particularly known for his angular, planed, steplike reliefs that exploit shadows alongside revealed frontally illuminated, tilted rectangular surfaces.

When you hover around their facetted fronts, the experienced effect is a kind of strobic spatial/optical flickering—as you move closer or backwards, or from left to right. With their relentlessly compacted, crystaline geometry they tend to pull your gaze down to the bottom edges where often there is a much lighter shift in chroma. Most—with the exception of the very large grEEdygrEEn in the office—are hot in optical temperature, suggesting at times light (but not heat) from a hidden ‘subterranean’ fire, hinting at contrasting tonal manipulation within the relief surfaces, and not the effects of external gallery lighting.

There is also another type of wall relief work in his current shows, one less machinic and without the hints of Vasarely—but still vaguely gridded. Though focussing on colour and more holistic, it uses weightless blocks of polystyrene to simulate the textures of oozy, rough, pock-marked concrete, sometimes diagonally cut into to form dramatic angled lines. These bulky forms also are visually hot, but the glowing chroma, because of the polystyrene texture, hints at more than mere light. It (like the facetted reliefs) suggests the artwork is itself on fire internally, a giant throbbing incandescent ember that astoundingly is overheated within.

One such pitted glowing polystyrene work (in the Annex) is circular, suggesting a perfect disc-shaped meteor, or thick plate-shaped asteroid—again with a possibly still-heated fiery core dwelling within, its extreme heat radiating to the pitted surfaces.

Albers‘ use of spray paint, featuring a hot palette of red/orange /yellow, has affinities with Mervyn Williams’ piercing fluro colour combinations, with strange dissonant ‘shadow’ areas within the tactile relief surfaces.

Both types of Albers’ relief sculpture (as possible tropes for our endangered planet) are protected by enclosing boxes of clear acrylic sheets. Scattered amongst these works are variations that are unlike the above by not being put in clear boxes. They are hardier and made of (in the first case), cast bronze or semi-translucent resin, and (in the second), concrete with a protruding steel reinforcing rod. They are also much cooler in tone and hue; simpler and smaller in construction, and much less incendiary or menacing in mood. Plus a pleasure to physically encounter directly—with no intervening planar sheen, corner edges or evanescent reflection.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Installation view of Ava Seymour's Domestic Wild at Te Uru, Titirangi.

I Taut I Taw a Puddy Tat.

TE URU WAITAKERE CONTEMPORARY GALLERY

Titirangi

 

Ava Seymour
Domestic Wild


9 March - 26 May 2024

JH
Still from Gregory Bennett's animated film, Folding of the Time, 2024. Courtesy of Gregory Bennett.

Bennett and Vor-stellen Partnership

TE WAI NGUTU KĀKĀ GALLERY

Tamaki Makaurau


Gregory Bennett, Vor-stellen
Folding of the Time


20 April - 4 May 2024

JH
Installation view of Fiona Connor's Thump at Coastal Signs

Fiona Connor’s ‘Thump’

COASTAL SIGNS

Auckland

Fiona Connor

Thump

18 April 2024 - 25 May 2024

JH
Installation of Stephen Bram at Sumer

Bram at Sumer

SUMER

Auckland

Stephen Bram

Stephen Bram

17 April - 18 May 2024