Greg Lynn / Fabian Marcaccio, Secession Project, 1999
The joint project by Greg Lynn and Fabian Marcaccio can be seen as a combination
of architecture and the visual arts. Their collaboration can be compared to that
of Richard Meier and Donald Judd whose works created an "ideal space" by merging
sculpture and architecture. The architect Greg Lynn and the painter Fabian Marcaccio
developed a different way of occupying space by coalescing different areas such
as iconography and topography in an urban setting. The project at the Secession
comprises all of these territories, facilitating a complex social and interdisciplinary
exchange between these realms.
Greg Lynn / Fabian Marcaccio, Secession Project, 1999
Greg Lynn, born 1964 in Vermilion, Ohio, is one of the architects who are generating
a new architecture by means of the computer. This is based on Lynn's view of a
dynamic environment whose very different forces have a potential impact on a building.
Whereas in traditional architecture the primacy given to the factor of gravity
results in verticality and statics, Lynn's constructions derive their form from
a synthesis of the complex directional forces at work. Crucial for Lynn's concept
is the integration of temporality and motion in the architectural process of creating
form. To this end, he feeds the computer with topographical, urban planning related,
thermic, etc. data of a specific site and lets it compute the flow movement of
all these factors on the basis of parameters. In a process of animation the computer
generates amorphous spatial bodies whose strong deformation is a visible result
of spatial and temporal factors.
Greg Lynn developed the project at the Secession primarily on the basis of the
architectural givens of the building. Proceeding from the dome - the most conspicuous
sign of the building which is symbolic of the Secession movement - the architect
developed a flowing, amorphous structure without corners and edges. A construction
consisting of aluminum poles extends from the dome over the facade into the entrance
hall and then into the exhibition room of the Secession. With this both dynamically
moving and mathematically precise form, Lynn refers to the complex architectural
contrast between the organic structure of the dome and the rigid geometry of the
Secession building. At the same time the construction oscillates and mediates
between three art genres. On the exterior, it appears to be an architectural intervention,
whereas on the inside it assumes sculptural qualities and also serves as a supporting
element for Fabian Marcaccio's painting.
Fabian Marcaccio, born 1963 in Rosario de Santa Fe, Argentina, clearly addresses
the formal issues of classical modern painting and American abstract expressionism
before dealing with the legacy of modernism in a critical and personal way. Instead
of concentrating on a specific painterly problem in his paintings, he refers to
a number of painting-immanent issues of avantgarde art by citing them. He gives
this mixture of references to art history an ironic twist by emblematically isolating
the quotations used and overdrawing them. This is visible, for instance, in the
basic means of design employed by abstract expressionism: e.g., brushstroke, grid,
stripe. Notwithstanding all the irony and detached-playful approach to the tradition
of modernism, ultimately it is the basic questions of painting that interest Marcaccio
- questions he seeks to solve in a contemporary way. Thus the relationship of
figure and ground is just as much a theme in his work as the potential object
character of painting resulting from the fact that it is inseparably linked with
the picture surface. In his most recent works, Marcaccio has used the surface
of the painting as a point of departure, experimenting with a "spatial" type of
painting. His abstract compositions on canvas that are hung on nylon strings gradually
broke with their two-dimensionality and developed into the surrounding space as
sculptural formations.
The exhibition at the Secession represents a radical continuation of these concerns.
The aluminum poles in Greg Lynn's spatial construction are clad with Marcaccio's
paintings which extend throughout the whole exhibition space. Together, the two
artists have developed a concept that results in a synthesis of architectural,
sculptural and painterly qualities in a specific spatial setting.
PUBLICATION
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GREG LYNN
/ FABIAN MARCACCIO
authors: Matthias Herrmann, Jeffrey Kipnis
bilingual. Secession 1999
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available in the
shop |
DISCUSSION
Monday, June 28, 1999, 7 p.m.
Chris Dercon, Director des Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum, Rotterdam
Greg Lynn, Architekt, Los Angeles
Fabian Marcaccio, Maler, New York
Organized by the Friends of the Secession.
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at