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Tatsuo
Miyajima
Time In Blue
8 November – 20 December 1996 |
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In
his newest series of works, Time in Blue, the Japanese artist
Tatsuo Miyajima has composed the most succinct expression yet of the
conjunction of interests that have fascinated and motivated him throughout
his career.
Electronic counters, made from blue LEDs (a recent technological development)
are mounted on black boards. Their random positions reflect the principles
of Chaos Theory. The counters chart cyclical passages of time, from
1 to 9 and back to 1, each counting at a different rate. The works
are in constant flux, the relation between their elements perpetually
changing. In this the works embody Miyajima's tripartite maxim: keep
changing; connect with everything; continue forever.
Miyajima's exploration of the complex, non-linear nature of time has
dominated his work of the last ten years.When his digital counters
first became mobile in the installation Running Time, his interest
began to focus more specifically on random patterns and Chaos Theory
- the tension formed by the inevitable presence of unpredictable elements
within every repetitive pattern. In Time in Blue this interest
comes to the fore, and combines with a uniformity of compositional
elements and structure to create a powerful marriage of form and chaos.
Miyajima's own Buddhist philosophy sees the universal and infinite
within the individual and finite. His work suggests a parallel between
this cosmic view and the scientific conception of the relation between
sub-atomic and macrocosmic physics which proved central to the development
of Chaos Theory. From the work's ability to suggest the universal
in the specific it derives a powerful metaphysical force.
Miyajima's international status has grown dramatically since his last
show at the gallery in 1995. His current one-man exhibition at the
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Big Time, will come to the
Hayward Gallery in London from 19 June to 17 August 1997.
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