Kay Rosen
Black and White and Read All Over

SEPTEMBER 10, 2010 - OCTOBER 16, 2010

Kay RosenBlack and White and Read All Over

Kay Rosen
Pendulum, 2003/2005
Latex paint on wall
Installation measurements vary
(Inventory #22635)

 

PENDULUM:

In order to model itself after its real life counterpart, PENDULUM's letters have to be completely reordered. The new order, PNUUMLDE, reflects the successive stations of a pendulum’s arc as it swings back and forth across an imaginary center between the first and last letters, the second and seventh, the third and sixth, and the fourth and fifth, punctuating each one with a change of direction. The sequence of letters is deliberately out of order linguistically but in order conceptually. While the word does not actively move, it serves as a kind of score for reading which the viewer activates each time they read it. As they attempt to spell it correctly by visually reordering the letters, their repeated eye movements back and forth between P and E, N and D, U and L, and U and M mimic the pendulum’s motion. It is an unintelligible jumble of letters until the viewers set it in motion. The reader generates the pendulum, whose alternating rhythm is reinforced by its black and white palette.

Color, sequence, and incidence of letters are important to the way words play out their message, but in issues of polarity numbers are important too, as in any situation involving two sides.  PENDULUM is stabilized by balance. Its even-numbered letters, four on each side of the center, methodically record each stroke to the right and left by the virtual pendulum. When it swings one way, it can be assured by gravity and momentum that it will swing back by that much the other way. The center here is not the subject of colonization, but the fixed point against which the equal distance to each side is measured. Within a word, that distance is measured by the number of letters. If pendulum did not have even-numbered letters, it would not have worked.

 

from The Center Is a Concept, Kay Rosen.



WORKS IN EXHIBITION

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Slice of LifeKay Rosen
Slice of Life, 2009
Enamel sign paint on canvas

18 x 16 1/8 inches

(45.7 x 41 cm)
(Inventory #22643)


Kay Rosen
Exhibition View
Exhibition View
Exhibition ViewKay Rosen
Exhibition View
Kay Rosen
Key, 2007
Enamel sign paint on canvas

17 x 26 1/2 inches

(43.2 x 67.3 cm)
(Inventory #22637)


Key
Exhibition ViewKay Rosen
Exhibition View
Kay Rosen
Exhibition View
Exhibition View
Windows (Front and Rear)Kay Rosen
Windows (Front and Rear), 2010
Pencil on two sheets of paper

Image/Paper size:  14 1/2 x 10 5/8 inches each

(36.8 x 27 cm each)
(Inventory #22648)


Kay Rosen
Exhibition View
Exhibition View
TentKay Rosen
Tent, 2009/2010
Latex paint on wall

Dimensions variable
(Inventory #22647)


Kay Rosen
Exhibition View
Exhibition View
OverbiteKay Rosen
Overbite, 2008
Enamel sign paint on canvas

15 x 25 inches

(38.1 x 63.5 cm)
(Inventory #22634)





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Kay Rosen

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Kay Rosen

RELATED INFORMATION
Boston Globe Exhibition Review 9/29/2010

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