Sunday, October 5, 2008

Gerhard Richter: An ‘ism’ of Perception

Gerhard Richter
An ‘ism’ of Perception
by Jane Crayton

Gerhard Richter is an important oppositional artist whose work focuses on perception, reality, reference frame, personal identity and belief. His work seeks to contradict any possible system or ‘ism’ of belief that could form. He does this by questioning and disclosing another point of reference indifferent to the ‘norm’ or to what is expected and envisioned by his audience. Richter is a theorist working in the medium of art, seeking to solve the problems of perception and assumptions. He seeks to find truth in our individualism, by embracing opposition through his utopian lack of illusions and assumptions.

Richter is working against perception, he is working against the ideals and rules we assume. Richter explains, “my method, or my expectations which, so to speak, drives me to painting, is opposition.” His work is the act of working against the view, working in opposition to styles and boundaries. He seeks to change perception, or blur the reality, so you can see, and understand the greater indifference of our diversity. His works depicted as blurs are an indication of just that; an imperfect reality, someone’s reality, another view, another understanding.

For example in his landscape paintings (Image A) he often renders the images in with a blur, he is playing with an altered state of ‘seeing’. He is not rendering the image or photograph as it were rendered from a camera; he is altering that perception, by changing the focus, or the sharpness of the photo, which he creates. He is painting the image to be perceived as a photograph, yet rendered within an altered state, that questions the applied assumptions about ‘seeing’ and ‘believing’ which we take for granted in photography. As he looked through the lens, and learned to see, he learned to focus, and blur those perceptive realities through the lens. This led him to question the entire system of photography all together, once he started to question his reality and his perceptions too.

For Richter his series of grey paintings is just that, a question of what [is]. The color grey is a collection of all colors combined, ironically creating a ‘non’ color. His work in the ‘non’ or ‘lack of style’ is extremely progressive.

I do not pursue any particular intentions, system or direction, I do not have a programme, a style or a course to follow…I like things that are indeterminate and boundless, and I like persistent uncertainty.

Richter’s Acht Grau (Image B) depict that lack of expectation that something should emerge. Does there have to be an image? According to Weintraub, “Richter is disengaged from belief systems. He presents no platform, forms no alliances, promotes no doctrines, expresses no preferences, and creates no trademark style.” Thus his series Grau show us how Richter thinks of the world, the many shades of grey, the many intentions, yet none implied. There is nothing, yet there is an endless possibility. Images are grey in color, there is substance and texture, they breathe, but there is no illusion, there is no promotion of ideas, there is just grey a static energy of ‘nothing’ implied or rendered.

Richter is interested in the view, the perception, the altered reference frames in opposition to the assumed ideal. His experience in Germany barely escaping to West Germany before the building of the Berlin Wall, is significant to the reasons why Richter feels encouraged to nullify. Richter is curious to see how preference, and or indifference are formed. He is curious to push belief systems, in order to question and the greater ‘nothing’. At a time when systems of belief are so strong, his opposition to these systems is seen in his work regarding perception.

His work Eight Grey (Image C) pushes the concept of his grey paintings even further. By producing 8 mirrored paintings, which reflect and present an altered view, a distorted reality to the viewer. Eight Grey creates a timeless approach to the ‘nothingness’ previously seen in his grey painting, yet this pushes the concept of the blurred, the reflected and the individual state of ‘seeing’ and blends them together in a magnificent way.

Richter is of great controversy because his works border on so many genres and systems, he is unclassifiable. His work with photography and painting overlaps a great deal, yet he ties it together with his philosophical approach in opposition to traditional ideas. In his work which he calls “pure pictures” , Richter explains,

“I’m not trying to imitate a photograph; I’m trying to make one. And if I disregard the assumption that a photograph is a piece of paper exposed to light, then, I am practicing photography by other means.”

Richter continues to push the boundaries of what is, and what is not. He continues to pursue philosophy, science and art into a form of altered non belief. Richter continues to explain, “no style, no composition, no judgment. [Photography] freed me from personal experience” Thus he can eliminate aesthetics from the theory of art, opening up a whole world of possibilities for artist and the practice there of. Richter explains the “practice of pictorial production,”

To create a painting is to fulfill something seen in the secondary reality of the painted image. The initial reality, the model, is no longer a motif a la Cezanne, but a photograph, that is to say, already an image.

This leads him to his work of frames and interactivity, where he chooses to include the viewer into the perceptive reality. (Image D)

the frames themselves were what constituted the “pictures” in the first place. The mobility of the panes of glass was intended to give the viewer the opportunity to “make a picture” in the truest sense, by positioning the frames and thus determining the excerpts of space the picture would represent.

Richter works to include his audience, within their own perception, into the framework of the art itself. He is concerned with the perceptive and altered state, the opposition to tradition or the expected, and foreseen. He is questioning and disproving theories, changing and altering previous assumptions. He is discussing diversity and individuality, through personal experience with his work of Mirrors and Frames. These experiences help us form our individual views and perceptions ultimately leading to a creation of our world view. Richter is interested in questioning reality or perceived reality; he is addressing the adherent problem of reference frames in regards to our world view. Weintraub explains, “Richter invites reality itself to enter his art.” This is achieved by including everything and nothing, by affecting reality, by questioning it.

Yet Richter finds a dilemma in the ‘Readymade’ he explains in Marking Time, how this dilemma affects painting and the view we perceive.

It seems to me that the invention of the Readymade was the invention of reality. It was the crucial discovery that what counts is reality, not any world-view whatever. Since then, painting has never represented reality; it has been reality (creating itself). And sooner or later the value of this reality will have to be denied, in order (as usual) to set up pictures of a better world.

In his work he does not disclose a doctrine, he chooses to nullify it. Richter explains, “art without doctrine is capable of conveying the ‘highest longing for truth and happiness and love.’” To be released from those assumptions, to be released from those false ideals, to be able to just be, and to accept that everyone else has their own reality, their own perception, and reference frame, from which they view life. With this understanding of Richter’s art, we can understand what his motives were in creating such minimal and oppositional art.

“The only “ism” that suits Richter’s career may be the “pluralism.” Richter defies all genres and styles, he explores in opposition to the ‘ism’. Richter is a philosopher through his study of perception, reality and identity in the ‘ism’ of our reference frame. He has broken many boundaries, and created many styles of minimalism and anti-ism through his dialog on opposition of illusionary assumptions. Richter has transformed into a timeless lack of identity, through the altered perceptions of the ‘none’ and the ‘blur,’ of the indifferent, yet uniquely framing the individual quality of our perceptive reality.



Image List
(Image A) Gerhard Richter Bäume, 1990



(Image B) Gerhard Richter. Acht Grau, 2002



(Image C) Gerhard Richter. Eight Grey, 2002



(Image D) Gerhard Richter. Study for Frames, 1965



Bibliography

Buchloh, Benjamin H.D. Gerhard Richter: Eight Grey. New York, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. 2002
Hubertus Butin/Stefan Gronert. Gerhard Richter: Editions 1965 – 2004 Catalogue raisonné. Dallas Museum of Art. 2004
Elkins, James. Photography Theory. New York, Taylor and Francis Group. 2007
Keeney, Gavin. The Language of the World. On the Nature of Things: Contemporary American Landscape Architecture. Basel: Birkhauser 2000
Rainow, Paul. Marking Time: On the Anthropology of the Contemporary. New Jersey, Princeton University Press. 2008
Taylor, Brandon. Contemporary Art: Art Since 1970. London, Laurence King Publishing Ltd. 2005
Weintraub, Linda. Art on and Over the Edge. Litchfield, Art Insights, Inc. 1996

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