3 rooms in Art Around the Building
See Martin Boyce's word installation, outside Tate Britain
This installation consists of a new paved terrace into which the words ‘Remembered Skies’ have been spelled out in illuminated letters, situated between the Clore Gallery – the home of JMW Turner’s paintings – and the Clore Centre for school visits to Tate Britain.
The phrase Remembered Skies came about through Turner’s paintings. While watching a documentary on Turner the question of composition was raised and how Turner would at times construct his compositions by moving mountains, repositioning trees and the framing of buildings. For his skies the constant changing conditions of clouds and light would necessitate a composite of the seen, imagined and remembered.
Martin Boyce
Boyce has developed a ‘fractured’ version of this repeat pattern to produce a new terrace outside the Clore Gallery. The spaces between the custom cast concrete paving give way to illuminated letters. With some letters orientated upside down and on their side, the constellation of tumbling shapes deliberately slows down the act of reading, requiring the viewer to piece together the phrase ‘Remembered Skies’ by walking across the work and seeing it from different angles.
Martin Boyce is best known for his atmospheric installations recalling archetypal 20th century landscapes, such as the urban park, the abandoned garden and the corporate lobby, as well as modernist interior motifs and objects like fireplaces and lamps. Many of his works incorporate text, written in an angular typeface developed from a repeat pattern designed by the artist and based on the geometric shape of four concrete trees created by the modernist sculptors Jan and Joe Martel in 1925.
The texts and phrases that Boyce has used in his work over the years come from a wide variety of sources. Some are found in literature, others written by the artist himself while others might be overheard or misread then altered and rewritten.
Art in this room
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