WA/SA
Working 9-5, at...
[waldrip architects/ s.a.] [architecture- los angeles]
Alberti, Sandro ‘Prototypical Curvature’; 17 September, 2008 [text47]
‘WA/SA’, ‘Aloha8’, and ‘Working 9 to 5, at...’
are fictions of fen-om: [www.fen-om.com]
Tic-toc, tic-toc, the watches have melted, but they keep on ticking… They do! Because personal timepieces
of all sorts, and particularly pocket watches, often bejeweled and fantastically ‘present’, signify something beyond their formal beauty; they are stand-ins for the mechanism of timekeeping, and of time itself. And they are close to us, almost alive, corporally so. Dali knew this, when he carefully dotted the endless surreal plains with these. In stark contrast to the sublime (where man is lost to the ‘grand ‘New’ addition at the Reina Sofia- by Jean Nouvel. vastness’) these time-keepers ‘beat’, close to our heart (potentially destabilizing image with pulse, as had been done by Duchamp with his spinning discs: ‘Anémic Cinéma’1). And, of course there is the popular idea that these refer to Einstein’s theories, and the folding of space and time. “Flat versus curved space”, in a sense. Interesting to note that pocket watches hold both: the flat face made to be observed, and the enveloping curved endless circle/cycle. The only Dalis I ever saw personally, were at the Reina Sofia museum in Madrid, an institution where Ray Smith’s work has been shown as well. Ray Smith, by the way, is the primary inspiration of this essay. He is the upcoming artist-in-residence at the Lux Art Institute (Encinitas, CA). Like Dali, he also has some deformed watches to show. A critical difference, however, is the sense of proximity: In Ray Smith’s work the watch overtakes the edges of the canvas, essentially becoming ‘endless field’ itself. Also, in the shift of scale, the artist also introduces a different type of distortion. Whereas the watch seems to have melted just as those others of 1931, it has actually been deformed in a particular mathematical transformation (a distortion where all points follow each other in a general warping). This is a critical difference, for it alludes, uniquely, to the purposeful act of distortion, of topological transformation. Now, topological transformations, as opposed to typological ones, transform the representable form of an object, but maintain relationships between the parts of the object. The result is an ‘affected’ object (connected to forces outside itself), as opposed to a newly conceived object. In the world of art, this is an important issue, for artists are concerned with re-presentation (in some way or another, what is painted is either a slight or overt deformation/ modification of the original object). At its most basic, topological deformation was reviewed early on by biologist-mathematician Sir D’Arcy Thompson. He considered that the difference between unique organisms was not as much a matter of different ‘types’ as it was of different ‘deformations’:
The Lux.
Dali: The Persistence of Time (1931).
Spinning disc from Anémic Cinéma.