Anri Sala: Time No Longer

Anri Sala
Time No Longer

1120 Seward Street Los Angeles | 7 September - 26 October 2024
Opening Reception: Friday, 6 September, 6 – 8 pm
Marian Goodman Gallery is delighted to present the first exhibition of Anri Sala in Los Angeles as well as the West Coast debut and gallery premiere of his immersive video, sound, and light installation, Time No Longer, 2021. Since the late 1990s, Sala has worked primarily with time-based media, often looking at the performance of music to narrate and interpret various histories of culture and politics. Within this exhibition, we find Sala engaging two seemingly disparate art forms that are united as condensations of time that embrace the past and the future, respectively, in fresco painting and computer-generated imagery.
side view of Time No Longer by Anri Sala

Temporal elements are also fused within the historical, musical and visual aspects of the work, Time No Longer, wherein a weathered record player is portrayed floating in a space station. While spinning in zero gravity, the turntable plays a new arrangement of French composer Olivier Messiaen’s 1941 work, “Quartet for the End of Time,” perhaps one of the most searingly haunting and memorable works composed in incarceration. During the Second World War, Messiaen (1908–1992) was captured at Verdun and incarcerated at a German prisoner-of-war camp. While imprisoned, he composed “Quartet for the End of Time,” performing with three fellow musician prisoners before an audience of captives and guards, using only the instruments they knew how to play and had available.

In Messiaen’s elegiac piece of chamber music, Sala recognized a sense of overwhelming loneliness and despair within an insurmountable crisis, along with the need to bring something, however fragile and soft-spoken, into that numbness. Within the composition, Sala extracted "The Abyss of the Birds," the only solo movement, written for a clarinet, for use in Time No Longer. The abyss, to Messiaen, represented time, “with its sadness and tediums,” while “birds are the opposite of Time; they are our desire for light…”. Further, Messiaen’s concept of time can be interpreted beyond our conventional understanding of past and future, a chronometry resembling an eternal rhythm that exists and extends beyond linearity.

The fortuity of time figuratively extends into an adjacent gallery, where Sala presents selections from his new series of frescoes. Here, Sala returns to the al fresco technique that he first learned about in the 1990s while studying art in his native Albania. This ancient method unfolds ambiguously over time, demanding precise temporal awareness. Each composition is divided into giornatas, the portions of work that can be completed in a single day while the medium, known as intonaco, remains fresh. Once it dries, the layers of pigments are permanently bonded to the surface, making any further alterations impossible.

One group of works, titled Surface to Air, originated from snapshots of clouds that the artist took from an airplane window. In this series, the gesture imprints the surface through three intertwined temporalities, creating a contemporary archaelogy. The ephemeral moments of the clouds, echoing the passage of time, are captured by the photograph. The marble, formed by accumulated sedimentary layers, serves as a solid and frozen representation of bygone period, imparting a new sense of chronology to the works. Finally, the fresco technique, governed by the rhythm of the giornatas, evokes the structured flow of time.

The second body of works, Noli Me Tangere Inversa, is based on a famous fresco from 1425-30 by Italian Renaissance artist Fra Angelico, which depicts Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene at the Garden Tomb after his resurrection. Sala painted these frescoes using an innovative approach that enables him to transpose the modern process of colorimetric negatives, typically found in photography, onto fragments of a Quattrocento masterpiece. The viewer's gaze is met with the tension arising from the intersection of two contrasting techniques.

The frescoes serve as literal time capsules, presenting multiple and nuanced temporalities, however frozen and eternal. In contrast, the sapphire stylus on the vinyl in Time No Longer, intermittently jumping from one groove to the other or remaining suspended in space, subject to the vagaries of weightlessness, challenges the linearity of time, which becomes synonymous with rupture and unpredictability.

 

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