Thursday, September 19, 2013

HYPERALLERGIC article September 19 2013

Sight-sound-and-the-colors-of-perception by Sarah Walko


ARTICLES

Sight, Sound, and the Colors of Perception

Anne Senstad, "UNIVERSALS," installation view in "Metamorphoses of the Virtual - 100 Years of Art and Freedom" at Officina delle Zattere, Venice (all photos courtesy the artist)

Anne Senstad, “UNIVERSALS,” installation view in 
“Metamorphoses of the Virtual – 100 Years of Art and 
Freedom” at Officina delle Zattere 
(all photos courtesy the artist)



“The Norwegian painter Edvard Munch would listen to the radio tuned in between two radio stations. I see this image as the space artists work in.” —Anne Katrine Senstad, in conversation with the author
*   *   *
Many viewers are coming across the work of Norwegian-born, New York–based artist Anne Katrine Senstad at the 55th Venice Bienniale. Senstad’s work is on view in the Officina delle Zattere, as part of the group exhibition Metamorphoses of the Virtual – 100 Years of Art and Freedom. Her installation consists of a projection of the video “Colour Synesthesia,” as well as a handful of other pieces and photographic works from the series UNIVERSALS Foldouts. 
When you walk into the installation, a large screen with constantly changing colors and abstract forms confronts you. In front of the video is a sculptural structure based on Senstad’s ideas of solidifying the space that light and color inhabit. This is done by isolating a set area that has had the original video projected onto it and recreating it as perceived form — a cross between a Buckminister Fuller machine and an oversized model for an architectural building. The object is symptomatic of the origin, becoming a replacement for the source itself.
Anne Senstad, "UNIVERSALS," installation view in "Metamorphoses of the Virtual - 100 Years of Art and Freedom" at Officina delle Zattere, Venice (click to enlarge)
Anne Senstad, “UNIVERSALS,” installation view in “Metamorphoses of the Virtual – 100 Years of Art and Freedom” at Officina delle Zattere, Venice (click to enlarge)








Moving around the sculpture, you experience it in relation to the video projection. The changing hues of “Colour Synesthesia” create variations in the structure’s surface, light, edges, and angles. Senstad says it’s also meant to exist as a solid, transparent Plexiglas piece, with the video projected directly onto it. This would demonstrate a more direct perception of transparency and continuous transformation.
In addition to showing in Venice, Senstad recently had a solo exhibition in Oslo, at SALT (Saltarelli Salong), a gallery in a former World War II bunker where Norwegian politician and war traitor Vidkun Quislingonce hid. The exhibition, curated by Bjørn Hatterud, was a take on the Venice project, including a V-shaped transparent thread installation through which Senstad projected her video in order to take her exploration of perception further. It also included six photographs from her color foldout series and two sculptures. The show was titled State of Space. “‘State of Space’ refers to perception of space, a dialogue with light, color, and the architectural psychological space and changing the perception of space sensorially and phenomenologically,” she explained to Hyperallergic. All of these pieces, however, make up only one end of the spectrum of Senstad’s intriguing explorations of light.
Senstad has a series of video pieces based on Surrealism’s subconscious investigations into art, psychology, nature, and magic. Last year, she did a residency in Mexico at Fondo Xilitla, a surreal sculpture garden created by eccentric English poet and artist Edward James in the 1960s. While there, she realized a film project involving large-scale, site-specific projections on the gardens’ structures and statues. Through her orchestrated array of light, she transformed the stone deities with color. (Edward James originally wanted all the structures to have colors, which she didn’t know when she began; she unintentionally brought back his original idea.) The event was filmed for the video piece “Projections of the Surreal.”

For “Projections of the Surreal,” Senstad worked with actor Paco Gallego Amigo and composer J.G. Thirlwell. “I directed Paco Gallego Amigo in the style of free theatre/expressive physical theatre,” she said. “I directed him to physically express ‘solitude,’ ‘post-colonialism,’ ‘the Mexican soul,’ and so on. For the composer, I gave him my synopsis and explained to him the content and meaning of the video piece. Being pretty abstract, we went over the finished edited video, and I explained my intentions, emotional inner states reproduced, with the various scenes and images. I like to give people the freedom to use their own creativity and bring their inner resources to the piece.”
The film is also infused with Senstad’s relationship with landscape. Moving beyond the historic architectural structures, she added both a psychedelic and a poetic element, creating a world that envelops the subconscious and subliminal.
“I mentally pre-edit and pre-visualize the video pieces,” she said, “so I actually don’t write out scenes. I work from an inner organized mental platform.” These comments reminded me of when I went to hear the author A.S. Byatt speak a few years ago, about a book she had just written. Explaining her working process, Byatt said she sometimes doesn’t write a word for weeks while working on a new book. She goes on long walks, thinking everything through, working out the characters and the story in her mind. Then she sits down and writes the entire thing all at once.
Senstad is in the process of doing research for “Projections of the Surreal, Part 2,” which will be based on Surrealism in Scandinavia and the psychological ideas floating around at the time of Munch. The project will incorporate ideas from Wilhelm Reich, the controversial German psychologist who promoted sexuality as a means to address societal and psychological problems. Reich, it turns out, spent a lot of time in Norway prior to moving to Maine. He was a student and collaborator of Freud, but Freud distanced himself when Reich developed his controversial theories and practices.
Senstad is also fascinated by synesthesia, a neurological condition in which one sensation involuntarily conjures up another, often an association of a letter or a number with a color or sound. She explores it in works like the one currently on view in Venice. The first medical reference to synesthesia appeared in 1710, written by an ophthalmologist named Thomas Woolhouse; he was researching a blind man who experienced colored visions when he heard specific sounds. Scientists became further interested in the 19th century, when it was determined that the phenomenon was not a product of imagination but rather of the brain. Isaac Newton was also fascinated by synesthesia: he experimented with different mathematical formulas in an attempt to connect wavelengths of light to their analogous sound-wave frequencies. It didn’t work out but inspired scientists, philosophers, and artists to study color. Ongoing studies of what is actually happening in the brain when synesthesia occurs show similarities to the brain’s activity during hallucinations.
Senstad is delving deeply into the relationship between the senses, especially between color vision and sound. All of her work deals with perception — how what we see, including the colors around us, shapes how we feel. The stimuli are objective but the experiences are subjective, mirroring ourselves, our brains, and our psyches. Senstad’s work follows this complex investigation of what is physical versus what is psychological, and where these lines get blurry. It does so generously, seeing truth on both ends of the spectrum and at many points in between.
Anne Senstad, "Spatial Projection: Colour Synethesia, Variation IV, Silent Version, DV" (2013), installation view in "State of Space" at SALT (Saltarelli Salong)

Anne Senstad, “Spatial Projection: Colour Synethesia, 
Variation IV, Silent Version, DV” (2013), installation 
view in “State of Space” at SALT (Saltarelli Salong)
“There is a fearlessness of death in Mexican culture,” Senstad said. “Life and death are two sides of the same coin; there is no separation. You find this in the old Nordic Viking culture, sagas and mythology, as well as in our Lapland culture and belief system. We also have an old belief system that entails the power and symbolism of nature as a whole but especially in mountains, brooks, rivers, and forests.  Art has a similar function in bridging the worlds of the seen and the unseen. The language and function of art is to express what is inexpressible — it is in that sense transcendental. Why is some art so legendary, immortal, beyond time and space or simply damn good? It lives in that shared realm of consciousness and the exquisite that taps into the immortal, the eternal human questions. In a sense it is ‘being inside the tone,’ as Norwegian composer Arne Nordheim said.”
I went to see James Turrell lecture years ago. He opened by saying, “I never thought of myself as an artist. I’m only interested in perception.” Senstad’s work is in conversation with Turell’s, focusing on perceptions of landscape and dreamscape, the physical reactions of the body to light and color, and the emotional and psychological aspects of the brain. Both artists’ work point my mind to its own landscape of vastness, like looking out at a tremendous sunset and finding yourself dissolving into all of the in-between states as you navigate the color, light, and dark.
Metamorphoses of the Virtual – 100 Years of Art and Freedom continues at the Officina delle Zattere (Fondamenta Nani, Dorsoduro 947, Venice), through October 31.
Anne Senstad: State of Space ran at SALT (Saltarelli Salong, Møllergata 37Oslo) from August 30 to September 9.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

STATE OF SPACE - Video documentation


Installation at SALT(Saltarelli Salong), Oslo, Norway, Aug- Sept 2013. A documentation of Senstad's video projection piece Colour Synesthesia Variation IV, Silent version, 2013 which is part of her exhibition STATE OF SPACE. Curated by Bjørn Hatterud.

Monday, September 2, 2013

Installationviews - STATE OF SPACE

STATE OF SPACE - Anne Katrine Senstad
SALT ( Saltarelli Salong)
Oslo, Norway
Aug 30 - Sept 9 2013

Funded in part by Foundation for Contemporary Art, New York

Curated by Bjørn Hatterud













Thursday, August 8, 2013

State of Space - Artist info - SALT (Saltarelli Salong) - Oslo, Norway


  Photo by Stefano Giovannini 2013




 STATE OF SPACE – Anne Katrine Senstad

- The sun, I presume you will say, not only furnishes to visibles the power of visibility but it also provides for their generation and growth and nurture though it is not itself generation.

Plato, The Republic, Book. VI, Section 509 D


- The origin of something is the source of it’s essence. The question concerning the origin of the work of art asks about it’s essential source.

Martin Heidegger, The origin of the work of Art




30 August – September 9, 2013

Opening reception Friday Aug 30th @7pm

SALT (Saltarelli Salong)
Curated by Bjørn Hatterud
Møllergt 37
0179 Oslo, Norway
www.saltarelli.no  

With generous support from Foundation for Contemporary Art, New York
www.foundationforcontemporaryarts.org

 Anne Katrine Senstad is a multidisciplinary Norwegian artist based in New York. She works in the intersection of installation art, photography, video, site and time specific work, and land art.  She was educated at Parsons School of Design and The New School for Social Research in New York.
Her work is currently on view at the 55th Venice Bienniale, Officina delle Zattere,  where she is exhibiting video, sculpture and photography as part of the exhibition Metamorphoses of the Virtual.  In 2011 she completed a major public art commission in collaboration with the internationally renowned architecture firm Snøhetta,. She has exhibited widely internationally at Zendai Moma in Shanghai, ThisIsNotAGallery in Buenos Aires, Utsikten Kunstsenter and Stiftelsen 3,14 in Norway, Björn Ressle Gallery, Gary Snyder Gallery, Gallery Nine5 and Elga Wimmer Gallery in New York, Pink Gallery in Seuol, Korea and KK Projects in New Orleans amongst others.
 Her video work has been shown with Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin/Madrid that took place at Centre Pompidou, Haus Der Kultur Der Welt, Berlin, and Beirut Art Center in Lebanon in 2011-12., as well as The Canadian Museum of Nature, Museum of Modern Art Ukraine in Kiev, Video Arte Internacional  Festival and Eva Peron Museum, Buenos Aires and various galleries and institutions as part of her exhibitions and multi projection installations. Her work is represented in Gallery, Institutions, corporate and private collections.


For more info on Senstads work: www.annesenstad.com

STATE OF SPACE - SALT(Saltarelli Salong) - Oslo Aug 30th @ 7pm


STATE OF SPACE – Anne Katrine Senstad

30 August – September 9, 2013

Opening reception Friday Aug 30th @ 7pm

SALT (Saltarelli Salong)
Curated by Bjørn Hatterud
Møllergt 37
0179 Oslo, Norway
www.saltarelli.no 

For more information please contact:
Saltarelli Prosjektrom: saltarellioslo@gmail.com
Curator Bjørn Hatterud: megaeldar@gmail.com 

Supported by Foundation for Contemporary Art, New York



STATE OF SPACE by Bjørn Hatterud, Curator

Anne Katrine Senstad has worked in a wide range of artistic expression in her practice. She has produced portrait photography, site specific installations in nature, projected films and light onto public buildings and made a series of surreal films.
Throughout her career she has focused on the intersection of nature and culture, the object and the perception of object, of rationality and the subconscious.
In State of Space she combines all of these areas of interest in a collection of her works . And what is the state of space in Senstad’s art? What is the purpose of “space” here in her art?
I find a theoretical key for the understanding of the works of Senstad in, of all places, culture studies. One of the theories that are frequently in use in culture studies is named space/place theory. This is a theory that sees the place as one potential understanding of a space. What makes a place is how we physically use the space, how we perceive space and the practice of it, how we construct space through language and fill it with objects, history and meaning.  A space might be inhabited with a selection of definitions of place at various moments in time. Simultaneously the same space might be perceived as different senses of place according to the subjective perceiver. This game of perception is used by Senstad in State of Space, a collection of works shown in the space of a white cube gallery.
The space of the white cube is normally used to display objects. What Senstad is showing us are different works that have the removal of the object as a theme. In Color Kinesthesia and Color Synthesthesia IV she shows us light perceived as color. Small technically modifications in the perception can alter even an empty space into a massively colored place.
In the same way she shows that a sculpture is a three-dimensional object, obviously, but that this object not only fills the space in the white cube. It also contains a space inside itself. By folding out the sculpture she questions the function of the sculpture as a solid and defining marker of a gallery space, a way of seeing sculptures that minimalism taught us in the 1960s.
Her two small sculptures are replicas of a larger sculptural piece, originally made to project color and light onto, which would give the viewer an experience of colors  in transit, light and reflected shapes in the art space.
This focus on the formal is what makes Senstad’s art so interesting. Her aesthetics are close to minimalism, monochromes and formalism. Her works might look slick and polished. They might be seen as just another commentary on works of the modern and postmodern genres.
This may be a conventional way of seeing her work. But, her work is not a tongue in cheek commentary on modernism or post-modernism classics. Senstad has an honest curiosity when she explores the physics of space and philosophy of perception. Beneath the smooth surface her art works deal with classical avant-garde questions: What is art? What is space? How do we perceive the same objects and spaces differently at separate times and with individual minds?
Senstad’s works owe more to 4’33” by John Cage than to 60s minimalism, and more to Yves Klein and early experimental post-modernism, than to clean formalism.
In this way Senstad’s works can be seen in two distinctively different ways at the same time. On the surface there is formalism. Beneath the surface there are some of the largest questions an artist can dare to ask and to work with.
Senstad gives us two very different ways of seeing her art. In this she creates variable potentialities from a singular space. And between these multiple potential observations of her work, you will find a space – a space where your perception is the guide.

Bjørn Hatterud is a curator, art critic, writer and musician based in Oslo, Norway. He regularly writes criticism in major nordic art press. His op-eds, essays and articles have been published in more than twenty different journals, magazines, newspapers and books. As a curator he has worked with artists such as Slava Mogutin, Bruce LaBruce, Zanele Muholi and Maja Ratkje.