Exploring how sensory experience is portrayed
through the artwork of artists Bill Viola, Pipilotti Rist and Bruce Nauman to
further discover how engagement can be formed between the audience and
Contemporary Art.
Title page
Course info
Title of essay
Table of contents
Introduction…page
3
Chapter
1 – Sensory Medium…page 5
Chapter
2 – Conceptual Engagement…page
Chapter
3 – Modern Technology and Contemporary Art…page
Conclusion…page
Introduction
The purpose of this dissertation is to explore how
contemporary art engages with the audience through sensory experience, focusing
on particular artists that create immersive environments and use certain
mediums to affect the senses. I want to discover how a more effective
experience can be stimulated through different art forms and therefore find out
how art can further engage with the audience.
Artists such as Francis Bacon work with sensation to
express personal and dramatic themes; his work ‘emanates a powerfully corporeal
sensation, at the limits of the bestial.’ (Ficacci, 2006, p37) but I wish to
focus on how different sensory experiences are created using immersive and
installation art that affect the different senses, to discover a sensory affect
created by each of my chosen artists.
In the following chapters, I will analyse
and compare how the selection of artists' work with sensation and stimulation
to provoke the audiences’ senses, how concepts are used to engage with the
audience and how modern technology has advanced the effects of sensation in art
and engagement with the audience. My selection of artists is: Bruce Nauman,
Pipilotti Rist, Bill Viola. These are artists work with different mediums to
create immersive and engaging artwork that provoke the senses; I shall also
look at how other art examples compare with their practice.
Firstly, Bruce Nauman; Nauman is
phenomenally a mixed-media artist but is most famously known for his work with
light installations. Nauman’s art touches on minimalism exploring
non-traditional mediums to discover how the use of fibre glass, light and
sculpture can affect the audience with simplistic yet alluring pieces. The work
stimulates the audience by affecting the body with the use of sound and space,
working physically with light, language and psychologically with his concepts;
he ‘posed fundamental questions about what it means to be human.’ (Blume, 2010,
p7).
The artist Pipilotti Rist engages
with the audience in a different way; also using film, the films interact with
the space around the work to construct atmospheres for the audience to
experience. The artist uses the space to draw the audience into her work with
the use of coloured panels, dark space, projection and lighting to create
‘…expansive, immersive environments.’ (Bedford, 2011, p1) Rist makes work that can be experienced and watched,
films that depict characters that fiercely desire to experience all sensations,
inviting the audience to be spectators to the fantasies but also be immersed in
her created worlds.
Bill Viola is another artist that
uses sensation but this is done through the notion of shared experiences,
concepts that explore religion, tragedy, spiritualism and the general trials of
life; themes that are faced universally by all humans. This artist uses film to
look at the reactions of the audience, they become spectators to his work but
also are drawn in because the works don’t merely depict birth they show the
sensations and what it’s like to experience birth, ‘archaic mode of visual
engagement.’ (Townsend, C, 2004, p13)
Sensory Medium
In this chapter, I shall explore
how sensory experiences are created with these artists’ work by looking at
their mediums and how they use the space with their practice, overall exploring
how Contemporary Art affects the senses of the spectators to fuel audience
engagement.
Artists’ Sensory Effect
(insert
THEORY OF SENSATION – brief)
For the artist Bruce Nauman, light
as a medium is a very important part for creating a sensory experience for the
audience. The piece The True Artist Helps
the World by Revealing Mystic Truths (1967) combines language with light to
formulate reactions, creating almost “beer sign” pieces that depict important
underlining issues but through a humorous colourful display. Nauman’s sensation
effect is created by producing artworks that create a ‘sensory overload from
the acidic colours’ (Ketnwer, 2006, p15) to overwhelm the viewers, working with
‘imperative directness’ (Ketnwer, 2006, p30) to engage with the audience. The
ambitious piece One hundred live and die
‘dominates your visual field’ (Ketnwer, 2006, p30) using powerful illuminations
with the flashing words that portray human experiences, overall drawing focus
to the individual and affecting the senses by distorting the vision.
The effects of sensation are
emphasised further through with the use of dimensions and space in Nauman’s
larger installations. This is optimised in the piece Corridor with Mirror and White lights, one of the pieces that even
the artist commented he could never stay in, the harshness of light made it
difficult to remain within for a long period of time. The light from the neon sculptures
‘aggressively penetrates the environment’ (p15 Ketnwer II, Joseph D; 2006) as well
the space in which it is contained becoming a sensory contributor. In this
piece the sensory experience for the audience is heightened with the use of
mirrors, surveillance cameras and the narrow entrance which the audience is
tempted to squeeze through. The space becomes an important factor in Nauman’s
sensory effects by dominating and capturing the audience, Nauman remarked ‘I
wanted to make kind of play experiences unavailable just by the preciseness of
the space,’ (Kraynak, 2003, p30). This contradicts the piece Pour Your Body Out (2008) by Pipilotti
Rist, which engages with the audience by allowing them to experiencing the
space freely to create a sensory experience. The piece itself is so vast with
the use of gigantic moving images, ‘twenty-five feet in height, to envelope
three expansive walls…’ (Bedford, 2011, p8), the artist wanted to provoke
elements of play and for ‘the space to be loose and unprescribed,’ (Bedford, (2011),
p8) However, although this artist works with play in her pieces it also relates
to Nauman’s sensory effect as the space still demands the audience’s attention,
it traps them in to ‘confiscate the viewer’s total attention’ (Bedford, 2011,
p7). This draws focus to the space for
creating sensory experience; Pipilotti Rist’s ambitious exhibition, The Tender Room (2011), epitomises the
relationship between the audience and the space, creating ‘installations that
became increasingly immersive,’ (Avery, 2009; p118), relating to Nauman’s
sensory effects of controlling the audience.
Nevertheless Rist’s not only wants to captures the spectator completely
but also sees them as a contributor, to create a connection and a
‘self-determined encounter for the viewer’ (Bedford, 2011, p8) with the
artwork. Nauman’s artwork almost becomes
a sensory experiment while Rist’s is
more like a sensory experience for
the audience; Rist spoke in an interview, ‘I like to create environments where
visitors are the most important element.’ (Bedford, 2011, p41)
Focusing on the use of space as a
sensory element, the piece Tiny Deaths
(1993) by Bill Viola works with the
space to affect the senses of the audience, engaging with the viewers with
another example of projected imagery but also working with the effects of light
and dark to create atmospheres and sensation that holds the audience in the
work. The space is moulded into an environment to create a sensory experience
with the use of projections to captures the spectators, ‘the images become part
of the architecture; they exist in space and as space.’ (Townsend, C; 2004;
p52) Similarly, another example by Rist, the piece Homo sapiens sapiens, captures the attention of the audience
through visual stimulation but also drawing them in to look at the images above
and be lost in the continuous imagery. Four images were projected onto the
ceiling so that the audience had to lie down and look above to see. The artist
commented in interview, ‘you can’t see where the video image begins or end’ (Bickers,
2011, p1), this focuses on how these artists both create their sensory effect
using immersive medium that transforms the gallery spaces. (MORE VIOLA)
In relation
to these artists’ practice, the piece Life
fog frog…Fog frog (2008) by Ernesto Neto also creates a sensory affect with
the audience with the use of physical space, communicating with the viewers by
inviting them into a ‘spatial and sensory labyrinth,’ (Dillon, 2008, p111) it
too is transforming a space into an immersive environment. In a sense Neto’s
work is diverse with his engagement with the audience as the artist works to
create physical engagement which is
shown in the piece Humanóides [Humanoids] (2001), a piece that uses fabric that
can literally be worn by the audience, textures that stimulate reactions,
‘transmitting a sensation of comfort and cosiness’ (http://www.itaucultural.org.)
to immerse them in the texture and forms of his piece. However, in accordance
with that particular sensory involvement, the piece Stadtlounge by Rist works with the use of sensory texture to engage
with the audience, in which the artist lavished every surface and surrounding
objects in a space with red fabric to give the audience the feeling of ‘walking
on the red carpet’ (Bickers, 2011, p2). It seems the most engaging feature was
the texture of the piece, the audience were ‘welcomed by the soft material,
making it a collective playground’ (Bickers, 2011, p3). The piece appears more
effective in creating sensory engagement than Neto’s Humanóides
[Humanoids] (2001) because Rist’s sensory effect creates engagement with
the viewers on different levels. Despite Neto’s use of lighting, the visual
stimulation worked with the textures of the piece, the vibrant red of Stadlounge seemed to stimulate the
audience more and draw them to Rist’s work, even winning the public’s prize in
a competition in 2005, the artist commented ‘ the colour in all of us is red.’ (Bickers,
2011, p3).
Stimulation through the senses
This further explores the idea of
stimulation from the senses. Stimulation changes mental state and even creates
disturbance in the mind, ‘Images stimulate cognitive reflection…’ (Russo; 2010;
p49). I propose to explore how these artists can stimulate the audience with interactive
installations and how sound and moving image can create stimulation in the
viewers in Contemporary Art.
The piece Get out of my mind, Get out of this room (fig) by Bruce Nauman works with sound to stimulate
association and learnt cognitive behaviour within the audience; The association
with the words and with sound conjures images in the mind and the pitch and
tone create a sense of urgency with the audience, affecting them both
psychologically because of the words spoken as a command but also an uneasy
sense that the spectators are in a forbidden place. (QUOTE) Nauman’s stimulation
is formed similarly to the sensation he portrays with his work, through the use
of control with the audience and their connection with the space, it adheres to
the ‘idea of Duchamp’s readymade to the body – and mind – of the artist and,
beyond that, to any space that he – and we – actually or notionally
occupy.’ (Bickers, 2006, p20)
Conversely, the series The Passions by Bill Viola stimulates
reactions but in a different way by using dramatic sights to produce ‘sensory
effects can overwhelm viewers so as to induce a state of fear and trembling –
while remaining uplifting.’ (Townsend, 2004, p25). The stimulus created from
these works is exemplified by the effects used in the films; from the series,
in the piece ‘Dolorosa’ emotions are depicted in slow motion so that every
sensory portrayal of grief can be witnessed in clarity and for a prolonging
amount of time, willing the viewer to dwell on every aspect of the characters’
experiences. Viola’s sensory effect is created through connecting with the humanity within us using powerful visual
stimulation to engage with the audience and make them experience changes within
themselves, ‘The realism of the emotions we witness in the videos requires us
to conceive of some disturbing source of their pain.’ (Townsend, C; 2004; p34).
Comparable to this, the piece I’m Not The
Girl Who Misses Much (1988) explores a tension between sensations, working
to stimulate reactions through the ‘movement, content, colour…the organic and
the technical’ (Bedford, 2011, p42) inviting the audience to become a part of
the piece, rather than through the portrayal of emotion but through the
fluidity of moving images, ‘people never say they have “seen” a Pipilotti Rist
work, they always say they have “experienced” it.’ (Bickers, 2011; p3).
Hence forth, the points above
illustrate how my chosen artists have used sensation, focusing on the senses,
to heightened audience engagement. Focusing on particular artworks, it seems
that the use of both experimenting with controlling the audience as well as
creating an experience for the viewers is combined to produce a strong
connection with the viewers. In comparison to other
art, the pieces by my chosen artist still engage strongly with the audience on
different levels of sensation.* in
particular the way that the invisible is made visible – none of the blatant
portrayal of sensation but deep movement and effect
Relating back to my original
exploration, the artists in question have their own sensory effect that engages
with the audience but also which works in comparison with each other,
formulating stimulation and an overall sensory engagement yet also working with
connections through concepts. (QUOTE?) This leads me to my next point,
exploring how the conceptual side of these artists’ work can further the
experience of sensation between the audience and Contemporary art.
Conceptual Engagement
Conceptual connection through
Contemporary Art is often created through a combination of the above components
mentioned: the senses being affected, the stimulation from the work and the
environment. I propose to explore how through conceptual engagement a sensory
experience is created within the work of my chosen artists with some comparison
with other art forms to gain greater understanding of conceptual engagement.
When considering conceptual themes
in Contemporary Art, ‘Deleuze – Francis Bacon’ explores the levels of sensation
and figuration, Bacon’s works tries to ‘eliminate the “sensational”…the primary
figuration’ (p27) meaning that the figurative meaning behind a piece, if
removed, would leave only the expression or emotion, the particular moment
portrayed. An example is Bacon’s screaming Pope, Bacon only wants to portray
the scream itself not the horror of the scene, ‘as soon as there is horror, a
story is reintroduced, and the scream in botched.’ (p28) Thus suggesting that the
story is unimportant and even hinders sensation as the character in Bacon’s
piece ‘screams before the invisible…the horror is multiplied because it is
inferred from the scream, and not the reverse.’ (28)
I am going to explore this theory,
using my chosen artists whose work is centred on the moving images and
distinctive structures, working with conceptual engagement created around the
ideal of being human and the restrictions and expansions that afflict us.
Human Experience and Narrative
Firstly the piece by Nauman, Double Cage Piece works to further
explore the concept previously mentioned, to experiment with the audience, ‘to
test out our human condition under the harshest physical and psychological
conditions.’ (Blume, 2010, p75) The construction of dimensions, tunnels,
projections and many more obstacles works physically to affect the senses of
the audience, forcing them to explore their own reactions, ‘forces
self-awareness’ (Blume, 2010, p75) and affecting them on a personal level. A
piece by Viola Slowly Turning Narrative
(1992) also works with conceptual engagement of human experience, making
the audience reflect on themselves ‘our own mortality which defines the nature
of human beings.’ (Townsend, 2004, p47). The piece is a combination of two projections
using moving image and sound to create the sensory experience, working through
a timeline of human experiences such as a wedding, car crash, children playing
etc. This too engages with the audience similar to Nauman’s piece as it makes
the audience identity with their own lives through the art work as well as
using objects to stimulate sensation
both physically and mentally, in particularly with Viola’s piece, as it also
includes a mirror on the other side of the screen as it turns, ‘obliging them
to experience all those situations as parts of their own lives,’ (Townsend,
2004, p48) to reflect on events and concepts that are experienced universally.
A sense of shared experiences can
also be portrayed through the everyday events of one’s life, conceptually
making the audience identify with their own experiences when looking at the
work; Nauman’s piece Eleven Colour Photographs works to create connection
between the art and the audience through a photographic series of everyday
things designed to create identification through normalised activities depicted
but which seem glorified and made important. ‘…expressions are literalised,
thus distorting or refracting language’s normative function as a simple means
of communicating ideas.’ (P10 Kraynak, J (2003) MORE
In a comparable sense, Sip my Ocean by Rist works to create
shared experiences but by engulfing the viewers and aiming to create a
‘blissed-out experience’ (Bickers, 2011, p3), opening the audience up to her fantasy worlds, with
the use of sensory engagement through moving images that portray the
exploration of the senses ‘video projected as two mirrored reflections on
adjoining walls…view of an idyllic underwater paradise, with a flowing sequence
of dreamlike images’, (http://www.guggenheim.org)
the pieces seem as though they could almost take people aside from themselves
and make them identify with their own humanity and become one. The artist
explained her reasoning for creating the environments, it creates a sense of
union, ‘when you come together in imaginary rooms you become a common body.’(Bickers,
2011, p2) This can also be achieved by the audience joining together within a
space, working with the conceptual themes and fuelling the ideal of being
performers; Rist commented on her exhibition of The Tender Room, ‘people can meet, interact…the meaning of this
room is the story of what people do there,’ (Bedford, 2011, p41) the audience
almost creating their own narrative within a space.
Diverse to the work of points
outlined by Bacon regarding the figurative, in the piece Pepperminta by Rist, the engagement between a character and a
viewer can advance the effects of sensation by creating a shared connection
that invites the audience into the work as a performer; the piece Pepperminta
optimises the ideal of a narrative within sensory art, the character that
encourages the pursuit of sensation ‘identifies sensual possibilities
everywhere’ (Bedford, 2011, p8) and through the use of sensation, particularly
colour, Rist works with the environment and with moving projections to enable
her to ‘transform lives.’ (Bedford, 2011, p11) The artist creates an
environment as the protagonist Pepperminta sees it, a place ‘transformed by
colour that becomes a stage for the viewer’s participation in the narrative
fantasy that structures the work.’ (Bedford, 2011, p11) In this sense the
audience engagement is fuelled by the narrative as well as the features of
installation created by the theme, but although the piece is ‘structured around
the narrative, it is most powerfully understood as a series of set pieces that
demonstrate with a hybolic tenderness…a more humane, interconnected, ethical
society might be built’ (Bedford, 2011, p8) one the audience can fantasise
about and become immersed in the ideal.
BILL VIOLA – Lack of narrative
Involvement (?)
Exploring involvement in the conceptual engagement –
physically being affected and immersed (?)
Conceptually, the artist Bill Viola
was even influenced by Nauman, this exploration of how ‘a viewer can be
confronted with an image which can unsettle basic assumptions of one’s body
occupying the space’ (Sellars, Hyde, Ross, 1997, p23) –
review this, in particular his Corridor
Installation (Nick Wilder Installation) 1970 which encourages participation
as well as physically affecting the audience. An example of Viola’s work
following this theme is (WATER PIECE?)
Similarly, Nauman’s piece South American Triangle (1981) works
with materials to express particular themes, in this instance ‘directly
suggesting torture.’ (Bickers, 2006, p20) The metal and wire construction gives
the impression of a distorted interrogation scene with a chair suspended upside
down above the head of the viewer this disturbingly ‘acts as a body surrogate’
but also ‘implicating the viewer’ (Bickers, 2006, p20) and involving them both
physically as they can move freely around and under the space as well as conceptually
by individually partaking in the “scene.” The simplicity of the piece itself
and the bareness of the structure seems
more affective when engaging with the audience as it stimulates contemplation
and the greater need to understand the piece than if the materials and concepts
are presented to us, Art Monthly reviewed
this piece when exhibited at Whitechapel as ‘more telling than the obvious
suspended installations…’ (Bickers, 2006,
p20). Thus proving that sometimes less is more.
for his work with ‘phenomenological
function of video’s real-time mirroring capacity’
Influenced by Bruce Nauman –
‘exhibited a deep understanding of the …implied the possibility of spaces that
exist only within the framework of a sculptural proposition.’
Although not necessarily focusing
on narrative, conceptually, the piece (blah) by Neto explores how
identification can be made between the work and the audience by formulating
comparisons between one’s own body and the art. The shapes and dimensions of
the work express organic themes and human bodily forms, ‘a representation of
the body’s landscape from within’
(http://www.designboom.com/contemporary/neto.html) and the audience can
identify with the concepts being portrayed by physical involvement to create
‘sensuality and physical union.’ http://www.itaucultural.org. ) However, it
seems that these themes need to be explained by the artist rather than the
audience being able to engage with the concepts freely, in the book ‘Psycho
Building’ the artist has been quoted saying that the above piece supposedly has
‘”subjective and implied limbs” as the artist says’ (Dillon, 2008, p111)
although this may not be easily translated to the audience through the
structure itself.
Modern Technology in Contemporary Art
In this chapter I am focusing on
how modern technology plays a role in the practice of my chosen artists and how
this further creates sensation and engagement in art. Also exploring how
technology’s role in Contemporary has furthered sensory engagement with the
audience.
When looking at the ‘Logic of
Sensation’ it mainly refers to the mediums in art before technological
advancement, focusing on artwork that worked fiercely to create sensation
through “limited” mediums in reference to what is available today, but it also
explores ‘elasticity in sensation’ (29), suggesting
that sensation is at its most powerful when it can cause mental stimulation and
affect all the senses yet other physically portraying one e.g. the visual
engagement through painting. The advancement in modern technology and its
involvement in our lives leaving people wanting more than that, more “thrills”
and sensations to be felt physically. I propose to explore this further and aim
to discover how and if modern technology has advanced sensation in art using
the examples of my chosen artists and other examples of artwork to compare them
to fully illustrate my points.
Firstly, the exploration of modern
technology in art has worked to fuel the use of artificially formed sensation,
making it a key component that is used in contemporary art to produce
stimulation using modern technology, exploring how modern mediums are used to
engage with the audience. An example of such works would be Olafur Eliasson’s The Weather Project,
shown in London, Tate Modern 2003-4 (fig) a clear exploration of what modern
technology can do to stimulation reactions from the audience, to create an
artificial environment and let the audience experience the piece freely. (QUOTE from installation art)
RIST > ‘Nichts (Nothing) – smoke
bubble machine. A comparison piece by one of my chosen artists would be a piece
by Pipilotti Rist, in the immersive piece ‘Pour Your Body Out’(?) looking at
how the use of modern technology, in this case the use of giant projections,
works to fuel the sensory involvement with art and the audience, similarly to
how Eliasson’s work captures the attention of the viewers and they become
performers in the work. (ALSO ART PAINT PIECE!!!!!!) –
see yourself sensing
The work by
Collishaw explores the use of different media, the combination of different
types of filming equipment that he uses is alike the works of Bill Viola, the
combining of out-dated equipment with newer technology which has the ability to
create a greater immersive effect. (example – video pieces) The artist even
expressed his own reasoning for using different mediums, for, (unlike Rist’s
opinion of film medium being restrictive, for our susceptibility to be immersed
in film is waning due to mass availability of technology) he believes that
technology can always cause affect as it works towards the same purpose of
stimulating the viewers,
Use of Neon – Bruce Nauman –
sculptural pieces. Minimalist pieces using the modern technology.
VIOLA> Aesthetically, the piece was a combination of medieval
technology in reference to the location and late twentieth century technology
in reference to the use of video and installation, this was seen as a downfall
by some critics, seen as a “theological challenge” as not only was it censored
somewhat but the combination of the two features took place in a ‘sacred space
of the building, while never yielding its own authentic voice.’ (Townsend, C;
2004; p183).
In an interview, the medium of the
artist’s practice was explored: Rist explained how the restrictions of the 2D,
as a vivid experience, are no longer a barrier because of the increasing use of
technology. How 3D cinema immerses
people, digital effects capture the imagination and we almost become a part of
the film we are watching, technology’s way of connecting with us more;
artificial sensation but producing a real stimulus(?) Thus this is how
contemporary art has progressed, working with our senses more than ever,
exploring new ways to stimulate reactions and how art can engage with the
audience. p41
RIST – ‘Open my Glade’ expresses
frustration at the limits of the camera.*semi quoted*
‘Sip my Ocean’
(insert Rist/more Viola/ Nauman)
See yourself sensing.
RIST > Without the use of modern
technology the art would be stationary photography and the immersive effects of
the floating figures and moving scenes would be unable to have such a hold on
the audience. (Art Monthly – talks about rist’s use of technology to achieve
her aims in art).
No comments:
Post a Comment