Are there visual faux amis? I suggest these two pairs, for a start.
Rachel Whiteread, Herringbone Floor (detail), 2001 |
Cornelia Parker, Black Path (Bunhill Fields), 2013, and Jerusalem, 2015 |
Parker's casts of the spaces in pavements are black patinated bronze, one of William Blake's burial ground, and the other from East Jerusalem. "Parker had often played ‘don’t step on the lines’ or Hopscotch while walking her daughter to school on a route that took them through the graveyard. These games rekindled an obsession with pavement cracks that had lain dormant since the artist’s own childhood. By pouring liquid cold-cure rubber into some of the gaps and letting it set, Parker was able to lift up this part the geography of the city that had been mapped out in stone many years before. The captured rubber cracks were upturned and then cast in black bronze. Placed on steel pins, they appear to hover just above the floor, creating an obstacle in the form of a petrified line drawing." (via)
Fred Williams, Riverbed, 1981 |
John Wallbank, Untitled (Sewn Cube), 2016 |
Williams' work is about the Australian landscape, some of it influenced by aerial views. He used a "calligraphic shorthand" to represent elements in the landscape. As well as painting, he was a printmaker.
Wallbank's cube presents an expanse of whiteness from a distance, but put your eye to a crack and "the other side" of the sewing that holds the cube's cloth covers together is revealed. It's made of resin, fibreglass, pigment, plywood, polypropylene rope (photo here). Wallbank's sculptural objects often use lacing as a kind of drawing.
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