> DESCRIPTION
Susanne Vielmetter Los
Angeles Projects is pleased to present a solo exhibition with new paintings,
drawings, sculptures and a film by Steve Roden. Steve Roden’s work explores
the relationship between systems of translation, and more specifically, how
sound systems translate into visual form. His work develops from complex
sets of self-imposed rules, much in the spirit of the systematic approach of
early conceptual minimalism, and then folds highly intuitive strategies into
this process. Over the last four years, Roden has built a body of paintings,
drawings, and sculptures that were generated from fragments of a single
twelve page music score. In each of the works, musical notes are translated
into letter or numerical equivalents to be used as elements for image
building, where a note might become a line, shape, color, or hand movement.
The notes are played out in sequence and each pre-determined building block
is combined with the next towards an intuitive whole. Containing somewhere
between 60 and 200 notes, each work allows the structure of music to
determine an intuitive process, a practice that Roden understands as fitting
comfortably within the historical context of west coast abstraction.
Inspired by a range of architectural forms, from the Watts Towers to the
early expressionist experiments of the Crystal Chain Group, the paintings in
the exhibition become a physical manifestation of Goethe’s idea that
architecture is frozen music. The drawings combine the stability of
architecture with the fluidity of music, with a nod towards 20th century
utopian architecture drawings, Bruno Taut's alpine architecture, and the
calligraphic / ephemeral works of Henri Michaux and Brion Gysin. The
film/video/sound piece was inspired by the recent discovery of the earliest
known sound recording and the text 'Primal Sound' by Rainer Maria Rilke. A
suite of four drawings called "Quartet" combines musical notations with
parameters derived from one of Buckminster Fuller's prefabricated domes of
the mid-1960's. These drawings take the forms of new scores that will be
performed by musicians in the gallery during the exhibition.
Steve Roden’s work was recently featured in the Mercosur Biennial in Porto
Allegre, Brazil, and in “Soundwaves” at the Museum of Contemporary Art San
Diego. He has had solo exhibitions at the Henry Art Museum in Seattle; at
the National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST), Athens; at the San Francisco
Art Institute; at the Fresno Metropolitan Museum of Art and Science; at the
Alyce de Roulet Williamson Gallery, Art Center College of Design, Pasadena;
at the Tang Museum at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs; at Pomona College
Museum of Art, Claremont and the Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum,
Santa Barbara, among others. His work has been included in “Park Sounds”,
Serpentine Gallery, London; in “sounds like drawing”, the Drawing Room,
London; in “In Resonance”, Henry Art Gallery, Seattle; in "Listen" (part of
“Sons et Lumiere”), Pompidou Center, Paris; in "Specific Objects: The
Minimalist Influence", Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jolla; in
"Treble", The Sculpture Center, New York; in "About Painting", The Tang
Teaching Museum at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs; in "audiolab 2",
Centre George Pompidou Museum, Paris; in "Resonance 2", Stadtgalerie,
Saarbrucken; in "Snapshot", UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles & Miami MOCA,
Miami, and in "Fall Selections 99", the Drawing Center, New York. Upcoming
projects include a site specific sound installation in the Begijnhof in
Kortrijk, Belgium, a collaboration with Stephen Vitiello in Marfa, Texas,
and the multi- venue exhibition “Hidden City” in Philadelphia in 2009. Steve
Roden was also a recent recipient of a California Community Foundation Getty
Fellowship Grant.