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If there was a recipe to the Busch-Reisinger Museum’s newest exhibit,
it’d probably go something like this: Take an onion. Flatten it.
Enlarge it a thousand times. Add every color and texture. Bake at 350º.
Let cool for five to 40 years, then try to find the original layers of
the onion again.
No easy feat, right? At their best, the strikingly unique
paintings and sculptures in “Stratification” challenge viewers to look
for similarly hard-to-find layers. Drawn out of the museum’s archives,
these seven pieces from contemporary German-speaking Europe feature
concepts of “layering,” according to the exhibit description. But all
too often, they come across as mere tricks of the eye.
The primary piece for the gallery, Sigmar Polke’s “Untitled,”
is an abstract painting with a variety of coats, some opaque, some
translucent. Buried in these layers of the canvas are a collage of
intentional marks, chaotic paint splatter, and textures both smooth and
wrinkled. It confuses at first, but each new look brings out a new
detail, or stratum.
George Richter’s “Said” and Georg Baselitz’s “Triangle” turn a
usually simple medium—oil on canvas—into a workout for your retinas.
One can’t help but struggle to shift the focus from the painting’s
surface to what is below, over and over again. At over two-and-a-half
meters high each, both paintings are bold, bursting with color and
texture. The physical material of the paint seems to extend off of the
canvas towards the viewer, while the colors seep into the depths under
the surface.
Needless to say, most of these paintings actively involve the
viewer, making them more accessible and appealing for the most casual
and uneducated of museum-goers. But not all of the works really fit the
theme of layering, and many aren’t even visually enthralling.
Apparently, Rudolf de Crignis’s untitled work—a huge square
canvas of solid blue paint—has a mildly interesting backstory. He
allegedly coated it repeatedly with different blues and greens in
multiple textures and directions. But at the end of the day, it’s just
a big blue quadrangle with very little to offer outside of the story
behind its creation. If a piece can’t transcend its parentage to
succeed on its own merits, who needs it?
Its neighbor, Richard Paul Lohse’s “15 Serial Rows of Equal
Amounts of Color with Bright Emphasis,” is just as coldly calculated as
its name suggests. Ultimately, it lacks any real layered effect other
than the optical illusion created by the ROY G. BIV rows of squares,
which has been done too often to really posses the necessary visceral
force.
The collection atones for some of these missteps with the
inclusion of two fascinating sculptures, the first being Thomas Lenk’s
“Stratification 21a.” The title may sound more like a math class than a
work of art, but the piece has an appeal that transcends mere
mathematical experimentation. Lenk has created a vertically arranged
“toppled domino” effect of black squares that twist back behind
themselves, creating the most literal manifestation of the exhibit’s
title.
The other highlight is Max Bill’s “Endless Surface in the Form
of a Column,” a gold-plated bronze Mobius-Strip that pushes the
concepts of layering to their most experimental extremes. The piece is
sure to captivate you, even if only because the glare will catch your
eye from across the room. The piece is aesthetically gripping, with
sleek design and obvious challenges to traditional definitions of
stratification.
The collection is a series of conflicts—the works are not at
all intimidating to look at, yet they require multiple appraisals; the
shifting perceptions can offer completely opposite views of the work,
and characteristics of the idea of layering do not always conform.
But ultimately, even if some of the pieces are too half-baked
to win any artistic “Iron Chef” competitions, “Stratification” presents
a rare opportunity to interact with dynamic works of art.
“Stratification” runs through Feb. 26.
—Staff writer Bari M. Schwartz can be reached at bschwart@fas.harvard.edu.
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