highlike

NATHANIEL RACKOWE

source: bischoffweiss

When daylight and darkness fade into each other, the city sits in half-light. Street lights flick on and off, an orange sun lifts over the skyline, neon advertising intensifies or dulls as the day turns. For a short while we exist between day and night.

The movement of neon in Nathaniel Rackowe’s sculptures NLP3 and NLP4 reflect the city’s shifting light. Transformation progresses with a gradual change in atmosphere, temperature and mood, as lights change from hot red to cool white. It’s an urban light, neon, which hypnotically captures our attention, impossible to resist. Rackowe’s geometric forms are almost like traffic signs warning of hazards ahead.

His materials and palette speak of buildings, street signs, construction sites: it’s an urban language. Like the memoir of an artist’s fascination with the city, his work comes from the streets of London, and cities visited during artist’s residencies, most recently in Copenhagen, during winter where the sun barely rises during long hours of twilight. Rackowe finds unexpected moments of urban beauty, lamplight shining on concrete steps, the symmetry of stairwell windows lined up the side of an apartment block, or blank light boxes used for advertising lit up at an empty bus stop.

He introduces glass into this work, which modifies the urban landscape into something slicker, more complete. His sculpture GP06 stands on the floor, smoked glass rises up out of foundations made from breeze blocks. The glass, framed by strip lights, glows like windows at dusk. Concrete brings the sculpture back to elemental things, to the construction site, raw materials, which have not been forgotten in favour of the sensual qualities of light.

Rackowe’s sculpture looks back to American minimalism, to Dan Flavin and Donald Judd. He engages with their rigorous aesthetic, and dramatic use of light: they were an early influence. But we live in confessional times, and there’s a personal dimension to his sculpture that his predecessors didn’t go in for. His is a reflection on contemporary life in the city, of wandering along empty streets at dawn, past construction sites where wires hang from scaffolding around skeletal buildings.

His glass pieces, titled from GP01 up to GP06, bring a sense of intimacy, of private spaces to his work. Sheets of glass, strip lights and wooden frames echo bathroom mirrors, our domestic life indoors rather than out on the streets. Their sleek geometric rigour is at the edge of designer cool but exposed wires and grey paint on oak roughen up the finish. They exist in between private and public, slick and raw, like the twilight place of his neon work. A hand painted vertical line wavers down the side of glass, making it function as a surface, rather than simply a transparent sheet of reflecting light. Wires snake down from a single light source, and echo the wavering lines of paint. Exposed rather than hidden, in bright colours like a high voltage warning, they remind us to be careful. These are not objects to get too comfortable with, or too close to, they might be hazardous. The geometry of each piece causes our eyes to flit between horizontal and vertical lines, of timber, glass, light and paint. Yellow, blue and red divide space with the strong urban colours of street signs, roadworks and building sites.

Beauty can be a tricky word particularly in contemporary art, too subjective, decorative, sensual, perhaps not clever enough. But Rackowe engages with it, he wants his work to be considered beautiful. As ever, it’s not that simple, his sculpture made of raw materials found in hardware shops and builders’ merchants, basic stuff, stands on the verge of a slick kind of beauty, and yet not quite.

Text by Hannah Duguid
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source: delfinafoundation

BIOGRAPHY

Designed to interact with the environment in which they are situated, Nathaniel Rackowe’s large scale architectural structures are built using light, kinetic elements and common industrial materials.

Drawing on Minimalism’s attention to the relationship between viewer, object, and space, and fusing the structural codes and material outcomes of Modernism, Nathaniel’s works transports the viewer from passive observer to participant, exposing the otherwise unseen dimensions of visual and temporal spaces.

Born in 1975, Nathaniel graduated from the Slade with a M.F.A in sculpture. He has exhibited his work internationally, including Galerie Almine Rech (Paris), the Economist Plaza (Contemporary Art Society, London), the Institute of Contemporary Art (London), Chisenhale Gallery (London), MoCA (Miami), and Duve (Berlin).

Nathaniel’s residency took place in Beirut, Lebanon.