ART-PRESENTATION: Keith Tyson-Life Still

Keith Tyson, Ikebana – Waterfall Stage (Boss Level) [detail], 2018, Oil on aluminium, 247.7 x 171.5 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth GalleryIn the works of Keith Tyson the question of how and why things come into being is being treated and investigated. Tyson has a curiosity for systems, man-made or natural, how they work and what they can create. Even though some of his works are based on systems of logic and scientific methodology the science has its limits, and so chance is incorporated to disrupt the predictable and enhance the accident, the surprise.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Hauser & Wirth Gallery Archive

The series of works displayed at Keith Tyson’s Solo exhibition “Life Still” have a shared subject matter; they are all flower paintings. Through the prism of this singular genre, Tyson moves between the philosophical, the mathematical, and the mythological to create the 25 works in the exhibition.  The notion of the hybrid and a fertile cross-pollination of ideas runs as a theme throughout the exhibition. In a similar way that a florist would pick and combine flowers from disparate regions on a purely aesthetic basis, Tyson chooses assorted painting styles and associated references which in turn provide a conceptual framework to operate within. In some instances, the titles give a sense of the cultural coordinates which have emerged in the process of making the work. “Ikebana – Waterfall Stage (Boss Level)” (2018) draws on a simultaneity of ideas, encompassing the formal Japanese flower arranging technique based on notions of idealised natural beauty and a blurred abstract background reminiscent of early modernist painting. Tyson collides source material to create a cosmology on the surface of the canvas, including a reference to a Chinese parable of enlightenment which appears in the tiny video game figures which populate the work. Throughout the exhibition, the artist’s interest in storytelling and mythology is matched by his enthusiasm for technology and the infinite possibilities it brings for cultural exploration. The laws of computer coding are mimicked in Tyson’s artworks through his take on a supposed rule of conceptual art; that there exists a parenthesis within which a conceptual artwork can be made. In this respect, the focus on one genre for the exhibition is a means of setting parameters or, as he explains, ‘limiting himself to one octave’. For Tyson, the intersection of the personal and subjective also plays a pivotal role in determining the outcome. Layered references are composed in each work like elements of a chord or symphony. A painting entitled “New Order (remix)” (2018) is in part an homage to Peter Saville’s iconic design for the cover of New Order’s album “Power, Corruption and Lies”, an image with an emotional resonance from Tyson’s past. Here the paint-by-numbers strip on the edge of Saville’s design, itself suggestive of a language for machines or a colourful bar code, becomes a framing device which recalls Mondrian’s geometric abstraction. Further references skip between art historical eras; the theme of the collage appears both through the appropriation of flowers from different paintings by Henri Fantin-Latour and the forms of Henri Matisse’s late cut-out work, “The Snail” (1953). In several instances it is the chance encounter or unpredictable occurrence that provides the starting point for the works. In the case of “These are the Greatest Times of our Lives” (2019), the casual configuration of a candle, vase of flowers and empty vessel which Tyson encountered evolves into a Memento mori. Although the objects can be ‘read’ as symbolising the three stages of life, it is the formal properties of the painting which become its subject. Tyson gives the painting the appearance of a polaroid, a nod to the demise of the chemical photographic print, and its theme of obsolescence strikes a melancholic note.

Info: Hauser & Wirth Gallery, 23 Savile Row, London, Duration: 22/5-7/9/19, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, www.hauserwirth.com

Keith Tyson, Ikebana – Waterfall Stage (Boss Level), 2018, Oil on aluminium, 247.7 x 171.5 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery
Keith Tyson, Ikebana – Waterfall Stage (Boss Level), 2018, Oil on aluminium, 247.7 x 171.5 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery

 

 

Keith Tyson, New order (remix), 2018, Oil on canvas (in artist’s frame), 78.6 x 63.1 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery
Keith Tyson, New order (remix), 2018, Oil on canvas (in artist’s frame), 78.6 x 63.1 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery

 

 

Keith Tyson, Amnesia, 2018, Oil on cancas, 78.6 x 63.1 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery
Keith Tyson, Amnesia, 2018, Oil on canvas, 78.6 x 63.1 cm, Photo: K T Projects, © Keith Tyson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery