The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Saturday, May 18, 2013
 
Romanesque Sculptures by Tacita Dean at Museo Reina Sofia
Tacita Dean, "The Friar's Doodle", 2010. Courtesy: The Artist, Frith Street Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York/Paris.
MADRID.- The monumental cycle of Romanesque sculptures in the cloister at Santo Domingo de Silos has long attracted visitors, including generations of artists. When Tacita Dean made her first visit there, many features in this historic complex engaged her attention, not least the Gregorian service of Vespers with which the monks end the day. Some months later, she returned in order to study more closely doodles and graffiti on and around the cloister’s colonnade, marks that she imagined might have been made over the centuries by the abbey’s inhabitants as they whiled away their hours in lonely seclusion.

As often in Dean’s practice, an image or chance encounter becomes a mnemonic palimpsest. Resonating in her imagination, it sets off a train of allusions that prompts recent as well as more distant memories. Perhaps the most far-reaching of the many references generated by Silo’s cloister was of an elaborate black and white doodle drawn decades earlier when Dean, a schoolgirl, attended weekly Mass with its maker: a young friar studying theology at the nearby university. Tellingly, if perhaps unaccountably, she had kept his drawing safely lodged inside a book as if she intended to do something with it, one day…. Among more recent memories was one involving a sheet of paper covered with intertwined pencil marks. As Giorgio Morandi obsessively arranged bottles and vessels on the worktable in his studio in order to compose his still life paintings, he kept track of their shifting placement by the simple device of tracing their footprints. With its mysterious tracery of intersecting lines, neither random nor strictly ordered, this much used under-sheet became the subject of a film Dean made in TK titled “Still Life”.

Yet another of her works, “Lord Byron Died” (2003), also came to mind during that second research trip to Silos. Comprised of a suite of six black and white photographs, it is based on photographs Dean made of ancient signatures she discovered, by chance, while searching for Byron’s autograph in the ruins of the Temple of Poseidon at Sounion in 1989. Although she set all this material aside for almost fifteen years, the seeds of what has proven an abiding interest in graphic traces - doodles, graffiti and the like - took root during that year in Greece on an exchange fellowship. (Prior to graduating from Falmouth School of Art in 1988 she had written her thesis on the work of Cy Twombly, a premonition of - or precondition for? - these nascent interests.)

Miguel Sobrino, an historian long interested in Spanish medieval architecture, contends that the heterogeneous engravings Dean shot at Silos have diverse origins. Some are mason’s marks, records of work done by individual craftsmen on the basis of which payment for their services was calculated. Others, which look like rudimentary game boards, were probably inscribed by the stone cutters as they amused themselves while waiting for the moment when their newly carved columns, still lying on the ground, would be inserted into the building’s fabric. Yet others, which may be rough sketches of ornamental schemes for the cloister, attest to the ready availability of stone as a convenient surface in an era when supplies of paper were scarce and expensive. By contrast, others which incorporate text and, even, signatures may have been made centuries later, possibly during a period when the monastery’s buildings, no longer occupied by the clergy, provided temporary winter quarters for the local farmers’ animals or storage for their crops.

Although at Silos such activities seem to have been comparatively rare, monks certainly made graffiti and doodles, as Dean had speculated. The monks at Pamplona, for example, were (famously) chastised for indulging in aimless activity (rather than for defacing the surfaces of an architectural masterpiece). Damage and defilement were hardly an issue at Silos, however, Sobrino contends, for this tapestry of ancient incisions, limned when the building was under construction, would have disappeared beneath the layers of lime and bright pigment that were routinely applied to all the carved surfaces.

No longer clandestine, this record of serendipitous impulses evokes lives lived in seclusion according to rigid temporal intervals, freighted with frequent periods of isolation. Patinaed by a combination of aging and natural cycles, the marks have acquired stories of their own, part of a vernacular history that, often unnoticed, evolves in tandem with the more official versions charted by landmark artefacts and architecture.

In “The Friar’s Doodle (2010), Dean has used a rostrum camera so that the film is comprised of pans, as opposed to the static shots which were formerly a hallmark of her work. Cut on the movement, this material has been edited to follow closely the drawing’s intricate meandering profiles. At no point does the camera pull back to reveal the elaborate composition in its totality. Seen cumulatively, as it were – in fragments, over time - the surrealistic composition can be known fully only in the mind’s eye. Dean’s refractory manner of revealing the original image serves, metaphorically, to underline the protracted processes of discovery required to decipher the bigger picture inscribed in Silos’s fabric. For the carved and etched subjects in the photographic inventory which Dean shot during her second visit to Silos offer a sometimes indecipherable, often fractured record that undermines any presumption that history might be singular, solid and sealed. This archive becomes a visual analogue of day dreams, musings and flights of fantasy that, while fixed in the past, is nonetheless familiar and accessible: kin to our own everyday, speculative forays that drift outside time, with no discernible endings. While “The Friar’s Doodle” similarly attests to the persistence of intuitive impulses that drive us to position ourselves within the lexical discourses of history, it also invites reflection on the interpretative mechanisms we deploy to decode their graphic residues.

Born in Canterbury, England in 1965, Tacita Dean attended Falmouth School of Art, 1985-1988, and the Slade School of Art in London, 1990-1992. Following a fellowship at the DAAD in Berlin in 2000 she has continued to live and work there. Since 1989 Dean has exhibited internationally. Among her major solo shows are exhibitions at MACBA, Barcelona, 2001; Schaulager, Basle, 2006 and Dia:Beacon, New York, 2008.

Museo Reina Sofia | Santo Domingo de Silos | Tacita Dean | Romanesque Sculptures |


Last Week News

March 22, 2010

Architect Frank Gehry Likes What He Sees with New Las Vegas Building

National Gallery in London Opens First Exhibition of Paintings by Christen Kobke

Ludwig Museum Opens PowerGames - An Exhibition by Danish Artists

The Emanuel Schlesinger Collection of Indian Art at Sotheby's

MOCA Presents Original Photographs and Film of the Las Vegas Strip

Dubai's Four-Day Contemporary Art Show Upbeat Despite City's Debt Woes

Prints and Studies by Anni Albers at Alan Cristea Gallery

Second Solo Exhibition with Jacqueline Humphries at Stuart Shave/Modern Art

Rare Exhibition of Maria Callas' Costumes, Jewelry, Photos and Memorabilia

Zhao Bo's Second Solo Exhibition in New York at Eli Klein Fine Art

Abstract Portraits and Clowns by Jim Torok on View at Pierogi

Polaroids as Chinese Ink Painting by Caroline Chiu at the Snite Museum of Art

Marcus Levine Makes Art with Hammer and Nails at Gallery 27

Controversial Portraits of American Soldiers Now in Washington D.C.

Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art Opens Four New Exhibitions

Art of the Chicano Movement Opens at the Museo del Barrio

The 32nd Annual Museum Mile Festival Announced for June 8

A Roma Journey: Europeana Supports New Web Exhibition from The European Library

Local Landscapes by Community Photographers on Display at the Massey

Museum Takes New Look at Air, Water, Land and Life

March 21, 2010

Exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago Looks at an Enigmatic Phase in Henri Matisse's Art

Ai Weiwei's Barely Something Exhibition Opens at the DKM

Exhibition of Loans by Oberlin College to Open at the Cleveland Museum of Art

Sixteen Large-Format Works by Mario Nigro Featured at A arte Studio Invernizzi

Sotheby's Spring 2010 Sales of Russian Art to be Held in April

MOCA Award to Distinguished Women in the Arts Honors Artist Jenny Holzer

Victoria & Albert Museum Opens First Major Exhibition of Quilts

Photographer Rex Dupain Exhibits at Galerie Lucie Weill & Seligmann

Industry Series by Studio Job at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

Solo Exhibition of Gerhard Mantz with New Virtual Landscapes in Black and White

Sotheby's to Sell American Indian, African, Oceanic and Other Works of Art

Artists Sell Work Direct to the Public at One of London's Best Loved Art Fairs

Works by Phyllis Bramson & Judith Geichman at Carrie Secrist Gallery

Design of the Century: Property from L.A. Philanthropist Nancy M. Daly to Highlight Sale

Exhibition to Show How Artists have Depicted Wealth over the Last Ten Years

Not Sure if Something is Art? There's an App for That

Musée de l'Elysée Celebrates Polaroid with Exhibition from Its Collection

Steve McQueen's Queen and Country Makes Its Last Stop at the National Portrait Gallery

National Gallery of Modern Art Showcases Paintings by Celebrated Russian Artist Nicholas Roerich

A New Installation by Carsten Nicolai at Siobhan Davies Studios

March 20, 2010

Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico Presents René Magritte's First Exhibition in Latin America

Kunsthalle Bielefeld Revisits the 80s with Exhibition from Bischofberger Collection

Sotheby's to Sell Iconic Warhol Self-Portrait Executed Before His Death

Rome to Display Ancient Greek Silverware Returned by the Metropolitan

Paul Kasmin Gallery Presents Paintings by Simon Hantai

Miami Art Museum Presents Exhibition of Interactive Chromatic Environments

Western and Asian Contemporary Art to Be Offered by Seoul Auction

Canada's First Truly Avant-Garde Art Movement Featured in Exhibition

Sotheby's to Offer Re-Discovered Collection that was Thought to Be Lost

Bonhams to Offer Historic Vintage Flying Boat in New York

Gallery Shows First Solo U.S. Exhibition by Designers Remy & Veenhuizen

Royal Academy of Arts Presents Key Works by Barbara Rae

Documents of Nouveau Realist Performance at the Menil Collection

Solo Show by John Smith Opens at the Royal College of Art

Mankind's Race for the Moon Celebrated at Bonhams in New York

Georgia Museum of Art to Host Exhibition as Part of UGA's Upcoming 225th Anniversary

Installation at Art Gallery of Ontario Invites Patrons to Dine Inside the Artwork

Ramchand Pakistani to Have a Weeklong Engagement at MoMA

Brussels Instrument Museum Rich in Sounds of Music

March 19, 2010

Folkwang Museum's Masterpieces Reunited for the First Time After More than 70 Years

Indian and South East Asian Art Sale Announced at Sotheby's

Caravaggio Investigation to Show Definitive Results in May

Letters by J.D. Salinger on View at the Morgan Library

Gagosian Presents the Work of Ed Paschke, Curated by Jeff Koons

20th Century British Art Continues to Make World Records at Bonhams

Ursula von Rydingsvard Present three New Monumental Works at Galerie Lelong

Fassbinder's Visionary Science-Fiction Thriller to Have a Weeklong Run at MoMA

Marjan and Gerard Unger Donate Dutch Jewellery Collection to Rijksmuseum

Polish Court Convicts Three Men in Theft of Auschwitz Sign

Quint Contemporary Art Presents Robert Irwin's First Show with the Gallery

Winner Announced for 30,000 Deutsche Borse Photography Prize 2010

Collage in Australian Art Explored in Exhibition at National Gallery of Victoria

Abu Dhabi to Present the Region's First Exhibition of Embroidery Spanning the Muslim World

World Records Tumble For Paintings By Stockport Artist At Bonhams

Middle Eastern Women Unveiled in Walgreens' Window

School of Visual Arts Presents Works by Emerging Photographers Guided by Leaders in the Field

Two-Story Tornado Commissioned and Presented by 21c Museum

Ex-NY Art Dealer to Admit Nearly $100M Fraud

Smithsonian Offers Activities and Experiments during NanoDays 2010

March 18, 2010

Christie's to Offer Andrew Lloyd Webber's Picasso Masterpiece from His Blue Period

Gagosian Opens Exhibition of Recent Paintings by Alberto Di Fabio

David Zwirner Presents First Exhibition by Marlene Dumas with the Gallery

Director Paul Schrader Donates Collection to Harry Ransom Center

Trustees of the Reina Sofia Museum Agree Not to Move Picasso's Guernica

Paintings by Lawrence and Park Enter Museums of San Francisco Collection

Christie's Brings in the Bids as Art Market Shows Signs of Life

Auction of the World's Largest Collection of Original Vintage Glamour Photography

Property from the Estate of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Z. Wick to Highlight March Auction

Dutch Police Arrest 2 Suspects Involved in 2009 Art Heist

Kathryn Markel Fine Arts Opens Third Alex Couwenberg Exhibition

Reagan 'GE Theater' Tapes Restored, Go to Presidential Library

Pierre Huyghe's La saison des fetes at Museo Reina Sofia

Rotation at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Features Seminal Chinese Painting

Delaware Art Museum Presents on Assignment: American Illustration, 1850-1950

Powerful Images of Contemporary Icons by Mark Evans at Scream Gallery

FBI in Florida Recovers Stolen Painting by Juan Gris

South Carolina Museum Rejects Monument to Mark Secession

Random House Publisher Services to Handle Sales and Distribution for Smithsonian Books

Auctioneer Plans $15 Million Emerging Nations Sale

March 17, 2010

Olyvia Fine Art Presents an Unmissable Exhibition of Unique Andy Warhol Portraits

Christie's Russian Art Sale Presents Works of Art and Paintings

Crime and Punishment Explored in Exhibition at Musée d'Orsay

Objects and Materials from the Funeral of Tutankhamun on View at Metropolitan

Marlborough Presents an Exhibition of Six New Works by Paul Hodgson

Art Dubai 2010 Presents Its Strongest Program to Date

Exhibition of Major New Works by Tony Cragg at Lisson Gallery

Paintings from 1967-1975 by Mark Greenwold at DC Moore Gallery

Director of Tate Modern, Vicente Todolí, Concludes Seven Successful Years

Works by Eva Hesse Never Before Shown Publicly in the U.S. at Hauser & Wirth

Sydney Artist Nafisa has been Awarded the Packing Room Prize 2010

Dutch Artist Puts Giant Sculpture on Iceberg in Greenland

Christopher Hanlon at The Viewing Room at Timothy Taylor Gallery

London Jewish Museum Reopens after Major Facelift

Valencian Institute for Modern Art Opens "From Gaudí to Picasso"

Hand-Stitched Sampler from 1825 Finds Home at Foundling

Students and Gallery Reveal True Identity of Elizabethan Portrait

Aga Khan's Islamic Treasures Go on Show in Berlin

British Council Appoints Business and Culture Expert as Chair

New Exhibition Hall Devoted to Human Origins Opens at National Museum of Natural History

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD

Related Stories



Johnny Depp: "Looking at a Painting by Pablo Picasso is Like Drinking a Glass of Wine"

Object Strategies Between Readymade and Spectacle at Museo Reina Sofia

Museo Reina Sofia Explores the Extraordinary Production of Drawings by Martín Ramírez

Pierre Huyghe's La saison des fetes at Museo Reina Sofia



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site