Inner reflections: new works by Lita Albuquerque invoke introspection in LA
Lita Albuquerque’s career stretches back to the 1960s, when she developed her praxis as part of California’s Light and Space movement. She has always had a propensity toward remote, desolate environments; over the four decades she has been creating, she has installed works at epic locations, including the Antarctic, Death Valley and the Mojave desert, and at the Pyramids at Giza, often completed in collaboration with architects. (Among them Mitchell de Jarnett, with whom she worked on the largest public art commission in the history of the State of California, Golden State.)
Albuquerque’s current solo exhibit, ‘Embodiment’ at Kohn Gallery in Los Angeles, although not on the scale of her public installations, is a more intimate reflection on the themes the artist has been investigating – part cosmologist, part mythologist – for her whole career. ‘Embodiment’ consists of new iterations of her renowned ephemeral pigment paintings – gold leaf on resin, on black and white pigment panels – and three sculptural works, all produced between 2015–2016. Taken together, they investigate variations of colour and light, the way they are absorbed and refracted in the world, and our subsequential perception of them.
Take the palette of tonal paintings that make up the main gallery: the colours you perceive are variations of rose madder (taken from lake roots), soft purple vesuvianite (originally found on Mount Vesuvius) and pigments used in Enogu, a centuries-old painting technique originating in Japan.
In the three sculptural pieces, each encased in a glass and steel pedestal, and using contrasting materials, heavy-looking obsidian is paired with honey and lustrous copper, while decomposed granite (commonly used to grit urban terrain) is combined with salt. The geological compositions of these substances seems as important to the artist as their aesthetic yield.
You don’t need to get all of Albuquerque’s references to the sciences; there is a pure poeticism in her gestures. As one stares into their shimmering circles, you experience a feeling of movement – from lakes to volcanic mountains, into the core of the earth and out, to the edges of the perceived universe. It is, as the artist puts it, ‘the earth as a sculpture moving in space’.
INFORMATION
’Lita Albuquerque: Embodiment’ is now on view until 5 March. For more details, visit the Kohn Gallery’s website
Photography courtesy Kohn Gallery
ADDRESS
Kohn Gallery
1227 Highland Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90038
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Charlotte Jansen is a journalist and the author of two books on photography, Girl on Girl (2017) and Photography Now (2021). She is commissioning editor at Elephant magazine and has written on contemporary art and culture for The Guardian, the Financial Times, ELLE, the British Journal of Photography, Frieze and Artsy. Jansen is also presenter of Dior Talks podcast series, The Female Gaze.
-
Rick Owens’ new Moncler collaboration features a surreal ‘demountable mountain refuge’ inspired by Charlotte Perriand
Your first look at Rick Owens’ latest Moncler collaboration, a mountain refuge designed alongside extreme-condition experts Hugh Broughton Architects and an accompanying clothing collection made for ‘hibernating’
By Jack Moss Published
-
The new Ford Capri wants to tap a vein of Gen X nostalgia. Does it succeed?
We ask if the all-electric Ford Capri can capture the swagger of its much-loved but rather oafish predecessor
By Guy Bird Published
-
Rug designer Sibylle de Tavernost’s homage to Fernard Léger
Abstract modern art, craft heritage and contemporary life fuse in Sibylle de Tavernost's new limited-edition rugs
By Harriet Thorpe Published
-
Frieze Sculpture takes over Regent’s Park
Twenty-two international artists turn the English gardens into a dream-like landscape and remind us of our inextricable connection to the natural world
By Smilian Cibic Published
-
‘This blood that is flowing is my blood, and that should be a positive thing’: Tracey Emin at White Cube
Tracey Emin’s exhibition ‘I followed you to the end’ has opened at White Cube Bermondsey in London, and traces the artist’s journey through loss
By Hannah Silver Published
-
‘Gas Tank City’, a new monograph by Andrew Holmes, is a photorealist eye on the American West
‘Gas Tank City’ chronicles the artist’s journey across truck-stop America, creating meticulous drawings of fleeting moments
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Intimacy, violence and the uncanny: Joanna Piotrowska in Philadelphia
Artist and photographer Joanna Piotrowska stages surreal scenes at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania
By Hannah Silver Published
-
First look: Sphere’s new exterior artwork draws on a need for human connection
Wallpaper* talks to Tom Hingston about his latest large-scale project – designing for the Exosphere
By Charlotte Gunn Published
-
Marc Hom reframes traditional portraiture in Cooperstown, NY
‘Marc Hom: Re-Framed’ has taken over the grounds of the Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown, planting Samuel L Jackson, Gwyneth Paltrow and more ‘personalities of the world’ into the landscape
By Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou Published
-
Alexander May, founder of LA studio Sized, on the joys of creative polymathy
Creative director Alexander May tells us of the multidisciplinary approach that drives his LA studio Sized and its offspring, a 5,000 sq ft event space and an exhibition series
By Hannah Silver Published
-
50 of America’s top creatives, photographed by Inez & Vinoodh
Photographed exclusively for Wallpaper* by Inez & Vinoodh, we present a portfolio of 50 creatives driving the current discourse on American culture and its dynamic evolution
By Dan Howarth Published