TOKYO.- Following Pierre Huyghes monographic exhibition, the
Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo honors American artist Dan Flavin and continues its presentation of previously unseen works from the Fondation Louis Vuittons permanent collection. This exhibition was conceived and produced under the artistic direction of Fondation Louis Vuitton, as part of its distinguished Hors-les-murs program, displayed in the Espaces Culturels Louis Vuitton throughout the world, in Tokyo, Munich, Venice and Beijing.
Dan Flavin first used light between 1961 and 1963, with his Icons series eight square canvasses with electric and fluorescent bulbs attached leading to the epiphany moment in his career when he created The Diagonal of May 25, 1963: a long fluorescent strip with a gold-colored bulb positioned on a wall at a 45-degree angle. From then on, he worked exclusively with pre-fabricated fluorescent tubes that came in four sizes and ten different colors (blue, green, pink, yellow, red, ultraviolet and four shades of white), arranging this limited repertoire without alteration or ornamentation.
Flavins work rejects all religious and mystical interpretations of light, expressing itself solely as a reference to its own presence it is situational in nature, focusing on the physical space occupied by the artwork and the viewers interaction with it. During the 1960s and 70s, Flavin began to create more complex configurations such as simple structures, corner installations and his barred corridors. The scale of his works increased to inhabit every nook and cranny of the spaces, stretching from floor to ceiling and along walls, picture rails and corridors. At the same time the artist explored different variations and intensities of color, which he adjusted depending on the length, number and arrangement of tubes, placed vertically and horizontally as well as diagonally.
From the 1970s onwards, the architectural settings Flavin worked on became increasingly monumental, leading him to focus on site-specific installations. Throughout his career, Flavins highest ambition was to offer sensory experiences of space by transforming it and enriching it using simple interactions of light.
The Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo showcases seven works of Dan Flavins from the Fondation Louis Vuitton collection: Untitled (1963), Alternate Diagonals of March 2 (to Don Judd) (1964), Monument for V. Tatlin (1964-65), Monument for V. Tatlin (1967), Monument for V. Tatlin (1969), Monument for V. Tatlin (1970), and Untitled (to Alex and Nikki) (1987), thus paying tribute to the pioneering oeuvre of this iconic artist.
Dan Flavin (1933-1996) was a leading figure in the Minimalist movement who devoted his life to exploring the medium of light. After rejecting the religious teachings imposed by his father, he studied art history, followed by techniques and materials at Columbia University (New York, USA). In his use of industrial materials, his serial repetition of elementary forms and his refusal of representation, illusion or metaphor, Flavin contributed to the birth of the Minimalist movement alongside Donald Judd, Robert Morris and Sol LeWitt.