Dora Maurer
Interesting exhibition at Tate Modern of work by Dora Mauer, a Hungarian artist.
Mauer’s work
seems to be about method rather than product and there was some fascinating
techniques and ideas used but I’m not sure I’d want to live with a lot of the
product. She resisted the socialist regime in Hungary and mainly displayed her
work in homes, cultural centres and student clubs.
I loved the print
pictured here which was made from a roughened aluminium plate folder in
diagonals then used as a printing plate. Another used blocks of wood on a
surface which she then ran acid through to form the printing plate. It was all
about method and making.
Some of the work
was about altering the perception of the space and I liked a series of double
sided mirrors hanging in the centre of the room with a pattern in their framing
which was repeated in a painting behind and evidently reflected the Fibonacci
sequence of numbers.
The final room
included works which mapped 2D images onto a 3D surface, like the corner of a
room, and more recent works which overlapped colours on oddly shaped boards
which gave an illusion of a curved surface.
Closes 5 Jul 2010
Reviews
Comments