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PAINTING
WITH LIGHT
On my first visit to the Carters’ studio I
all but fell over a tangle of what at first appeared
to be …? Actually, I’d no idea what
it was. I only registered it in the act of disentangling
myself from it: a mass of black wires held together
with duct tape in the tradition of motorcycle couriers
and space junk.
“Ooh careful”, said Nicky.
She heaped it all back into an old metal biscuit
box like so much black spaghetti, moving it aside
with her foot, leaving me unsure as to whether she
meant careful of yourself or careful of my stuff.
I think it was probably the latter as what I’d
tripped over turned out to be one of the precision-built
instruments which she and her husband Robert Carter
use to make their work.
Rob and Nicky call the unique process they’ve
developed ‘painting with light’, and
further qualify this as ‘photography without
a camera, painting without brushes’. What
I’d tripped over was, in effect, their brushes.
Prior to my studio visit, speaking with Nicky Carter
on the phone, there was a certain under-lining of
these words ‘painting with light.’ You
can appreciate why she might want to stress them
when you begin to understand how much the highly
manufactured appearance of the work belies the very
hands-on nature of its creation. Approached from
a different aesthetic perspective, these could just
as easily be gestural paintings; they’re certainly
very experimental, and the Carters have an almost
Greenbergian love of the intrinsic qualities of
‘the light’, just as an artist may have
the joy of the paint.
I liked the sound of painting with light - like
sketching on air, or somehow organising the elements
in the spirit of pioneer photography - capturing
the silhouettes of objects projected by the sun’s
rays onto sensitive grounds. Of course, it turns
out to be much more prosaic: painting with light
is a more or less accurate description of how it’s
done. On my way to the studio, I was unsure what
this meant. Not because I was stuck on the fact
that painting, rigidly speaking, can only be the
act of applying paint - you can paint with a hosepipe
on a dry stretch of road if you want. It was more
that I simply couldn’t understand how and
where the painting came in to it.
Quite rightly exercising his prerogative to retain
at least some of the myth of creation, Rob Carter
took me through the process without giving me the
blueprint. In fact, technically speaking, it is
indeed photographic, in that an image is produced
by means of chemical action of light from optical
fibres on sensitive film. Yet photography has nothing
to do with it. These bunches of coloured light are
mopped like great squeegees across the surface of
the sensitised ground, dragging Richteresque trails
something like those left by a side-winding snake
in sand. Interestingly, this same fibre–optic
light is also, in some cases projected onto the
finished piece with a kinetic effect – expanding
circular ripples of coloured light – so that
the works appear to change as the projected colours
scroll through the spectrum.
Up until my visit I’d seen the work only in
catalogues, and in reproduction it loses well over
50%, not necessarily of vibrancy, though this suffers
too, but more of the experience of something moving
in harmony with specific light changes to create
the overall effect. These are really stills you’re
looking at, and could probably only be approximated
with a flick book style approach. At first certain
pieces seem to have obvious visual associations
with Pop and Op art. The Carters’ early target
paintings, for instance, would seem to follow a
Pop tradition – while being unconcerned, of
course, with Pop art’s examination of the
imagery and ethos of mass culture. Being purely
abstract and optical, these works are closer perhaps
to Op art, but while they may draw you into wondering
how the artists have achieved certain visual effects,
neither Rob nor Nicky Carter - who operate with
an equal strength of vision – have set out
to trick the eye.
The work, in fact, is totally unambiguous. It is
purely formal, and self-referential in its intentions.
Colour is the fundamental ingredient whose vibrancy
is maximised by form. Though the work has –
I’m obliged to say it - a hypnotic quality,
and so stays with you beyond the first impact. I
remember Damien Hirst talking somewhere about the
early dot paintings: something about the myriad
possible colour combinations and why a blue works
next to a brown, and how, when they don’t
work, that can be interesting too. That’s
applicable to these pieces, except that the changing
colour combinations present the question more fleetingly.
As I've mentioned hypnosis already I’ll mention
it again in relation to the Orbs which are in some
respects the simplest. Certainly they can be said
to possess hypnotic capabilities. When I entered
the studio they were propped unassumingly against
the far wall.
Immediately however they caught my attention and
I found myself involuntarily walking towards them,
frowning, as I couldn't at first understand what
I was seeing. Ok, I said to myself what are these..?
They were in fact a series of three-dimensional
floating orbs, rendered flat only by the act of
glancing away and then glancing back, and I suppose
a belief in physics. However as soon as the eye
settles back on them you are drawn in once more.
Perhaps the ultimate success of these pieces is
not to make you search for how this affect is being
put over on you but instead to take you away from
formal considerations into a hazy landscape; for
these pieces seemed to me to be very much to do
with plane and landscape in a way in which the other
work is not. Though the orb dominates the frame,
the very simplicity of the form suggests a varied
vastness beyond it, in front of it, in fact all
around it. The character of this vastness is somewhat
dictated by the individual colour of the orb but
largely left up to your own input. The edges here
are softened in a beautifully subtle echo of Rothko
and as such create peripheral spectrums of complimentary
hues. In Orb II, perhaps because of the roundness
and the orange colour, I was reminded of a quote
by David Hockney: that no one looks at a painting
longer than it takes to peel one - an orange that
is, but that was certainly not the case with this
piece.
Perhaps
the whole notion of painting with light is bound
to create metaphysical associations, as this was
also my reaction to the Light Painting series. Grounds
of pure colour which have in addition to the process
of painting with light been treated with a rhythmical
series of paint marks reminiscent of action painting,
specifically those of Pollock, except that here,
the marks, although adhering to a pattern, have
a randomness which is ultimately calming as opposed
to unsettling or frenetic and as such has a potential
for reverie and penetration.
Although the Carters have used paint before, in
terms of integrating the
ultimately uncontrollable application of paint,
these mixed media works are perhaps the most complex
to achieve and as such reflect the unknown and experimental
nature of the work.
What gives the work its freshness and something
unexpected comes perhaps from its experimental nature.
The making happens entirely in darkness, where the
image is gradually built up with successive increments
of light. Working in complete darkness, you are
bound to be surprised, of course. The Carters have
little indication in the darkroom as to what the
results will be when the work is developed. Some
of the effects achieved by chance have now been
adopted as practice – in much the same way
as Bacon became specific about his accidental process,
refining and honing it over the years.
Rob and Nick Carter are still, they say, in the
early stages. One of the enduring impressions you
take away with you is similar in kind to having
been blinded by high wattage lamps. Afterwards when
you close eyes, incandescent lights float about
on your retina, creating not so much an exact facsimile
of the work but an impression of its power. The
evolution that is clearly discernible through the
Carters’ work so far culminates in one of
their most recent pieces Light Drawing, Blue. In
this painting the departure from more generic forms
of targets and stripes has given the work a more
personal and singular feeling, which is echoed by
the subtle though strong tonal values that also
create a third dimension reminiscent of the folds
in a Vegas show curtain. This would be the opening
curtain because, beyond its immediate fascination,
this work – which is barely contained by its
own contours – suggests the massive potential
of just how much further it can go: the light years
ahead, you might say.
Harland Miller 2002
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