A solo show by ICP/Bard MFA alum Sam Falls MFA'10
Ballroom Marfa is pleased to present Sam Falls, an exhibition of new work by the artist on view from March 13 – August 16, 2015 with an opening reception on Friday, March 13 from 6 – 8pm. Highlighting Falls’ multidisciplinary approach to time and representation, the show will feature new sound, video, sculptural, and wall works.
The transformation of materials and forms through duration and the elements, as opposed to mark-making and mimesis, weaves its way through many of Falls’ pieces. The exhibition will showcase select works created during Falls’ residency in Marfa in July 2014, where the artist engaged directly with materials and forms unique to the Far West Texas landscape.
“A significant element of my work is representing time and place through a merging of sculpture, painting, and photography; this idea was catalyzed in part by my trips to Marfa over the past several years,” says the artist. “I was taken by Donald Judd’s outdoor work Untitled (15 Works in Concrete) at the Chinati Foundation, impressed by how fixed and changeless the works appear compared to the landscape and passing time. As a result I have created several works based off of my love for minimal form but replaced its defiance of nature with an integration of the environment and change. It should prove to be an exciting visual experience to see these pieces in a dynamic relationship to Judd’s works.”
The particular bodies of work in the show subtly, but powerfully confront the legacy of Minimalism in Marfa: creating a critical dialogue around sculpture, preservation, landscape, and authorship, that could only happen in the context of Marfa’s singular art historical landscape.
Sam Falls (b. 1984, San Diego, CA) lives and works in Los Angeles. His work has recently been shown at LAXART (Los Angeles), the Zabludowicz Collection (London), the Pomona College Museum of Art (California), Museo MADRE (Naples), International Center of Photography (New York), and the American Academy in Rome, . His work is in the collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, LACMA, Los Angeles, Centre Pompidou, Paris, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, and the International Center for Photography, New York, among others. He received his BA from Reed College and his MFA from ICP-Bard. He has published more than ten books, including Death Sequence (Karma, 2014), Life Size (Karma, 2012), Studio Space Print Time(Printed Matter, 2013), Light Work (Gottlund Verlag, 2010) and Visible Library (Lay Flat, 2011).
Artist Statement
This show comes from a few different ideas and places, one of which is the influence of Donald Judd and Marfa. It was my second trip to Marfa that struck me most, the unchanging nature of the place and sculptures, and while my own work has always been informed by minimal aesthetics and continues to be, the element I knew I wanted to incorporate, especially with my sculpture was change. This change has entered my work through incorporating the environment, so that the art reflects time and place, rather than denying or defying it. The reciprocal object exposed to time and environment beyond the artwork is the viewer. The piece which most readily responds to all these issues is the outdoor sculpture made from a 1984 Ford Ranger. When I moved from New York to California in 2011 I bought a new Ford Ranger, so in conceiving this sculpture I first wanted to find the same model truck from the year I was born. The truck had at some point been repainted red from its original tan color, and as humans regenerate their skin cells every seven years, I reversed the process on the truck and had it sandblasted in a random patter down to tan lines and then all the way to steel. Some of the panels of the truck were clear-coated to preserve the visible “skins” of the truck, while others are left to rust in the elements, exposed. The “life” of the truck was removed and repurposed with a new life, substituting the engine block with a marble block and potted cactuses, and the truck bed became a soil bed of succulents native to southern North America. As the copper pots of the cacti oxidize they’ll leave their mark on the white marble, and the succulents inside the truck and in the bed will take on the heart and purpose of the machine, growing with the environment and viewers.
The works on linen in the show were hand dyed on-site in Marfa and left outside to fade in the sunlight, creating images that were masked out by minimal shapes in pictographic images from the ancient Chinese tangram game. The idea came to fruition when reading Judd’s 1994 essay Some Aspects of Color in General and Red and Black in Particular, namely near the end when he states:
“Color of course can be an image or a symbol, as is the peaceful blue and white, often combined with olive drab, but these are no longer present in the best art. By definition, images and symbols are made by institutions. A pair of colors that I knew of as a child in Nebraska was red and black, which a book said was the “favorite” of the Lakota. In the codices of the Maya, red and black signify wisdom and are the colors of scholars.”
I had already begun working with the tangram puzzles but not found the perfect situation for their form. I wanted to use the images on the fabric and then create tables with the game pieces in their resting assembled rectangular form. I was always interested in the divide between Judd’s furniture and artwork, how the designs were quite similar but separated by space and function. In this work the tables function first as productive tools for the artwork, and then secondarily as furniture. I also wanted to mix the media, using some industrial materials that would weather (copper and bronze), along with more static and classical material (marble). The quote above led me to take interest in the history of tangrams and source Chinese marble for the project, while also using the colors red and black in a site specific homage to Judd. The other works on linen are also durational and natural “photograms” which came about in Marfa after seeing the cattle fences everywhere, the grid appearing even out in the middle of the country. I wanted to work with something so familiar to rural Texas as well as the aesthetics of art history, an American theme ever-present in everyday life, its representation, and its abstraction.
As these works were being made by nature out in the sun, I continued to work, as I do, on the issues of representation and abstraction in art, which I see to be its contemporary and historical building blocks, as well as the defining element of human life: time. I am always trying to draw out the inherent qualities of time and make them visible (and also in this case auditory), to share the past in the present and point toward the future coming to pass and all together immerse ourselves within it. As with time, in abstraction and representation there’s the indexical and the unknown, the challenge is how to rectify these into a constant singularity. The goal in the video and sound work here is to not only address the issues of time, but the representational and abstract, not simply as separate qualities combined in one artwork, but fundamentally dependent to produce the work itself. Rosalind Krauss talks about “shifters” as they apply linguistically to pronouns: the way “I” is the same symbol but becomes indexical depending on the context of who’s using it, you can say “I”, or I can say “I”, and it refers to a different person, or “it” can refer to an apple or an orange, depending on context and proximity. As Krauss cites Jakobson in her essay Notes on the Index, Part 1, “A shifter is ‘filled’ with signification’ only because it is ‘empty’”. So time as a linear progression always fills up the pool of now. Now is never the same but the substance it takes is. This came in handy when conceiving these works and the idea I wanted to visualize was how we can see or hear time as it passes to be reminded of its unified past, present, and future; every moment is “now”, or will be “now”, or was “now”. “Now” is a temporal shifter as I see it, and so these works regenerate the word to inform the moment both as specific and as the works progress elliptically, “now” becomes abstracted and wholly representational. The works are both in motion, the movement visually of the video and the waves landing on shore, as well as the eternal rotation of the record. Yet the subject, the symbol now, gains meaning every time we see or hear it, it disappears and returns, the same but different every time – different because of our context, and different because of the works’ variations. We change the work by being present, and the work changes us by being present, we are breaking down and being built up, just like every moment.
Sam Falls
January, 2015