|
|
Werner Haypeter
Traces of Movement
11 September - 25 October 2008
Initially Werner Haypeter’s art appears to be a straightforward
geometric use of industrial material.
Small metal beams, layered resin reliefs and PVC sheets are placed in
simple arrangements that seem to create a sense of manufactured symmetry.
This illusion is however altered by Haypeter’s artistic intervention.
Bands of Haypeter’s hallmark muted yellow
acrylic are placed off centre or are misaligned from their expected systems.
Similarly marks and blemishes in the finish remind us that these works
are in fact made by hand – the artist’s touch
enhances rather than diminishes the
apparant machine made appearance.
This exhibition is Haypeter’s second one-man show at Annely Juda
Fine Art. It begins with a series of spectacular new large “drawings” almost
2 metres in length. Each comprises elegantly folded, creased and torn
paper with occasional black watercolour panels which are part concealed,
part revealed. These works provide an interesting insight into Haypeter’s
use of material – the manipulation of the paper reflect his use
of resin, steel and PVC used to highlight our response to process. They
invite us to investigate his procedure – like a minimal
form of origami.
In a further development the exhibition also includes a series of new
wall sculptures in which bands of fluorescent paint have been placed
through layers of semi-transparent resin. Haypeter has introduced another
new and subtle dimension. The paint will glow softly in twilight and
brightly in the
dark – and it will also glow faintly or intensely according to
its depth within the resin. As with the folded paper pieces Haypeter
uses the relative effects of opacity and transparency giving a pronounced
three-dimensional feel to two-dimensional planes.
Haypeter’s work unites the aesthetic of mass production with the
geometric concerns and theories
of Modernism.
|