Image for Charles Gaines

Charles Gaines

Drawings

16 February - 29 March 2020

St. Moritz

As a preventive measure and based on the guidance of health officials, our gallery in St. Moritz is closed until further notice.

A focused exhibition of work by celebrated conceptual artist Charles Gaines opens in St. Moritz, marking the first presentation in Europe dedicated to Gaines’s drawing practice from the historic Numbers and Trees series. The exhibition displays two distinct bodies of work executed over the last five years. The first floor presents meticulously rendered ink drawings from the celebrated Central Park Series, which can be seen as precursors (or ‘templates’) for Gaines’s renowned larger scale, Plexiglas works. Employing a rule-based numeric system to create soft, numbered markson a hand-drawn grid, each drawing isolates the individual trees that eventually comprise the completed series. The second floor honours 24 vibrant new watercolors of assorted trees. The exhibition allows for an unprecedented insight into his practice and an intimate look into his systems and processes.

A pivotal figure in the field of conceptual art, Gaines has long employed a generative process to create series of works in a variety of mediums. By creating space between a specific symbol and the systems applied to its representation through measurable values of color, Gaines’s distinctive approach forges a critical link between first generation American conceptualists like Sol LeWitt and subsequent generations of artists, including Gaines’s students Edgar Arcenaux, Andrea Bowers, Mark Bradford, and Sam Durant, among others who are pushing the limits of conceptualism today. Speaking about his longstanding commitment to unveiling the paradoxes of human visual understanding, Gaines said, ‘The system has never changed, but the outcome is always different.’

Images of trees have recurred time and again in Gaines’s practice since the mid-1970s when he first began charting their varying forms through a system of numbered grids in the series Walnut Tree Orchard (1975 – 2014). His methodical examination continues in the Numbers and Trees series, which began in 1987. In his large-scale Plexiglas works, Gaines selectively layers paint on acrylic sheets atop black and white photographs of corresponding landscapes with trees. Following this process, each tree is assigned a distinctive color and a numbered grid that reflects the positive space of the tree in the original photographic image.

In St. Moritz, the works in the exhibition are rendered on individual sheets of paper and demonstrate the essence of the numerical systems that are at the heart of his practice. Instead of collapsing multiple trees onto a single plane, each sheet features a single tree meticulously composed of tiny painted cells–an artistic codex in and of themselves. Viewed as stand-alone works, each piece unfolds the multitude of layers that comprise the larger pieces in his oeuvre.

Installation views

Related Content

About the Artist

Image of Charles Gaines

Charles Gaines

Figura clave en el ámbito del arte conceptual, el conjunto de obra de Charles Gaines trabaja con fórmulas y sistemas que interrogan las relaciones entre los ámbitos objetivo y subjetivo. Mediante un enfoque generativo para crear series de obras en diversos medios, Gaines ha construido un puente entre los primeros artistas conceptuales de las décadas de 1960 y 1970 y las generaciones posteriores que hoy llevan los límites del conceptualismo más allá.

Nacido en 1944 en Charleston, Carolina del Sur, Gaines comenzó su carrera como pintor, obteniendo el M.F.A. en la School of Art and Design del Rochester Institute of Technology en 1967. Durante la década de 1970, su obra experimentó un giro drástico en respuesta a lo que él mismo más tarde llamaría ‘el despertar’. Esta revelación se materializó en la serie ‘Regression’ (1973 – 1974), en la que exploró el uso de sistemas matemáticos y numéricos para crear marcas suaves numeradas con tinta sobre una cuadrícula, con cada dibujo construido a partir de los cálculos del anterior. Este enfoque metódico marcaría el recorrido del artista durante las décadas siguientes.

Current Exhibitions