Commensalis

I’ve never met Michael Visocchi.

I almost met Michael at Grytviken in 2021 but the Corona Virus intervened. I was sequestered onboard within sight of the old Whaling station. I could see an arctic tern flying over king penguins, fur seals sleeping on the beaches and a few hardy souls in bright orange parkas walking past with hiking poles at the ready. Fur seals seem to have an institutional memory of past human/seal interactions. It’s best to be on your guard.

Grytviken Whaling Station at South Georgia Island

I leaned over the rail above others taking the “polar plunge” and thought to myself that this was my one regret,

Polar Plunge in the blue water of South Georgia Island

My one regret was not meeting Michael at Grytviken, not walking the Flensing Plan with him, not sharing that first encounter with all which is South Georgia Island. The trip had not been easy with ships in quarantine, ceaseless COVID tests, and an “Alice” feeling of running as fast as you can to stay in the same place every time a new regional COVID regulation was issued. Not easy- but all within the fluid style of traveling with which I am familiar. There is always opportunity, there is always something to see, something to learn, something which will inform both past and future. Yes, my only regret being so close to Michael and separated by a very small stretch of lapis blue water.

In January of 2020 I was asked by Denise Landau of Friends of South Georgia Island to represent FOSGI in the Flensing Panel Artistic Commission. The Panel included Professor Elaine Shemilt Vice Chair SGHT Director of Centre for Remote Environments Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art University of Dundee., Helen Havercroft Chief Executive of the Government of South Georgia South Sandwich Islands GSGSSI, Hayley Collings Communications Manager IAATO, Amanda Catto Scottish Arts Council, Christine Read Director Everard Read Gallery, Gemma Lloyd Associate Bridget Sawyers Ltd Public Art Consultants, and Professor Bjørn Lorens Basberg SGHT Trustee Economic Historian.

The remit was to reimagine the Flensing Plan at Gritviken. This is not an easy task as it is a knife edge balancing act between atonement for a vast number of whales “flensed” on that spot and the true grit of the men who worked the station amidst the jaw dropping beauty of South Georgia Island. Neither the history nor the setting can be ignored. There is a message of hope with the return of whales in number but it’s still a very difficult story to tell.

By March the proposals had been reduced to three finalists.

Michael Visocchi was not the strongest proposal but his presentation stood head and shoulders above the rest. Here’s why. He presented a proof of concept. A film of the maquette rotating showed the shadows and reflections as the sun moved over the “spirit tables”. Micheal repurposed existing elements from the Whaling Station and imbued them with new meaning. He was not derivative. His approach was thoughtful, measured, realistic and dare I say it? Passionate. Passionate with a quiet gentle enthusiasm which comes from the heart as you can hear direct from Michael in the video linked above. Read the interview with Michael , follow his travelog , and read about those lucky enough to meet Michael on his first visit to Grytviken.

I feel truly honored to be part of this process and look forward to seeing the installation in Grytviken.

Bauhaus 100

Article for the Aspen Institute 2019

Harry Teague in the recent Bauhaus panel discussion at the Limelight nailed it. Harry always does that but in this case it was one of those crystalline statements one which rings down to your toes. “Bauhaus started as a philosophy but has become a style.” 

Sure enough, that’s what we think of when we think of Bauhaus- primary colors- bold geometric shapes. How ironic that a style which was rooted in purpose has become ornament. We recognize the Mondrian colors and  the Corbusier blocks but we have lost the “why” and nothing was more important to Bauhaus then the “Why”. 

On the eve of Aspen’s own “Bauhaus Ball” maybe it’s time to look at the “Why” of Bauhaus costumes ….the “Why” of the human form and how the costumes for Bauhaus Ballet developed. 

“…… I start with a form and use the body simply as a means to it’s realization.” 

Oskar Schlemmer

Vol. IV, NO. 2, October 1931 Schrifttanz

… and there we have the essence of Schlemmer’s costumes- to make the form tangible, visible, to capture the dynamic movement of space around the body and how our perceptions of space are altered by dancer’s interactions with that space.

“A ‘space dance’ is what we once called the form of movement theatre which was performed on the Bauhaus’s stage. Three geometrical shapes (a square, a diagonal line and a circle) were drawn on the dance floor and were stepped by three dancers using different tempi and movement sequences. Thus the space itself became intensely expressive, yet this was only due to the dancer’s variations in the sped of their kinetic actions…”

Oskar Schlemmer

Vol. IV, NO. 2, October 1931 Schrifttanz

It takes very little to go one step further.If a dancer can transform our perception of a triangle or a square by stepping in and out of a triangle or a square then what happens if the dancer becomes that triangle and square? What happens if the motion becomes form and the form becomes the costume and the costume redefines the motion? 

Cubical space

The Marionette: The egg shape of the head, the use shape of the torso the club shape of the arms and legs, the ball shape of the joints

Motion of the human body in space

Metaphysical 

The Theatre of the Bauhaus

Oskar Schlemmer, Lazlo MMoholy-Nagy, Farkas Molnar

“Much of what we did was surprising (even to us). One example is when we tried to fix the centre of a space with the use of tightened ropes and the tensions created a completely different sense of space and movement. another experiment, which had never been tried before even though it seems so obvious, also achieved a surprising result: the use of poles fixed to the dancer’s limbs acting as their extensions. The greatest surprise was the movement itself. …”

Oskar Schlemmer

Vol. IV, NO. 2, October 1931 Schrifttanz

Oskar Schlemmer’s ballet of geometry

https://www.youtube.com/embed/0j0x325uR8s

The difference between the still image of the pole dance and the video of the pole dance is striking. To understand the “why” of these costumes they must move.

“…That the figurines of the Triadic ballet only had meaning when they moved in space, became obvious when we looked at them as motionless exhibits…Even the attempt rotate them mechanically could not replace the dynamic movement in space for which these figurines were planned… The formal approach I used when making the ballet sprung from basic rules of geometry and stereometry which I translated into new, and contemporary, interesting materials.  It also sprang from the anatomy of the human body which, apart from being made of flesh and blood and having a mind and feelings, is also a miracle of biomechanics exactness.”

Oskar Schlemmer

Vol. IV, NO. 2, October 1931 Schrifttanz

https://www.youtube.com/embed/mHQmnumnNgo

It is the “style” which still speaks to us today and we play with the pretty colors and the bold geometric shapes but has that original idea become an anachronism? Maybe not.. maybe with Mandelbrot’s fractals and Einstein’s gravitational waves we are coming back to the idea of making the motions of the spheres easier to visualize – easier to understand on a human scale.Think of what was “hot” and “new” and “radical” in the 1920’s and it’s difficult to get past Einstein. If you look at the costumes of Oskar Schlemmer and remember how mass shapes space then maybe… just maybe something begins to click. The theatre and ballet of the Bauhaus was all about the effect of the human form on space. He refers to the “space dance”, the effect of the dancer’s movement not on the human body- but on the surrounding space. The movement within a space changes our perception of that space.

The forms are all pulled towards the central mass of the torso with the exception of the club which defies the laws of physics. 

Centre Pompidou Metz

 After all that is what Art does it reaches beyond what we can prove in rigorous scientific repetition to what we feel is a hidden truth, a truth yet to be “proved”. Science is successful if the experiment can be repeated Art is successful if it can never be repeated. Art walks the razor’s edge of  individual consciousness and when it’s successful touches our shared consciousness in infinite ways.  Maybe it is because at their most basic these shapes are the building blocks of the natural world and how their mass changes the shape of the universe is our own river of time. 

Aspen Ideas

Art Installation for The Aspen Ideas Festival 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022. There were several challenges in this project not the least of which was the technical one of floating the “stained glass” within the armature of the sculpture in an outdoor installation subject to wind and weather. Then there is the challenge of how do you keep the visuals fresh year after year. Fortunately these are so dynamic and sensitive to different light at different times of day playing with shadows on pavement, on grass, on deep water, on shallow water makes these “the same” but “different” for each year.

Installation for The Aspen Ideas Festival 2023

Installation for The Aspen Ideas Festival 2018

Installation for The Aspen Ideas Festival 2017

Installation for The Aspen Ideas Festival 2015

Installation for The Aspen Ideas Festival 2014

Roadtrip

 

You never know what you’ll find on a road trip. I experimented with digitally manipulated photographs for awhile.. it seems the photo editing software has finally caught up with what Photoshop was capable of 2 decades ago….