Light Forms
North Carolina Museum of Art, USA (Solo), 2015
Installation view, Emil Salto: Light Forms, 2014-15, North Carolina Museum of Art. North Carolina, USA
For Danish artist Emil Salto, light experiments are a form of intuitive yet systematic inquiry. The results of Salto’s experiments are carefully modulated interactions with light and shadow: monochromes, photograms, and films. Salto uses light as an agent, through which we can touch on questions of time and space, optics and perception.
For his first solo museum exhibition in the United States, several series of photographs and films are shown together.
The artist has also created two light and color installations that reach beyond the discrete image to envelop the viewer and choreograph shadows.
In the obscurity of the darkroom, Salto casts light on photosensitive materials, inserting body into the composition between exposures. Chance tempers the discipline of his working process, which is calibrated to the medium at hand—whether that is analog (celluloid) film or handmade laminated 35mm slides, objects casting shadows, or light itself.
Salto draws upon modernism’s language of abstraction and, above all, its restless spirit of experimentation.
His work is kindred to artists of international movements of the 20th and 21st centuries such as Bauhaus, the Zero Group and, more unexpectedly, the American Light and Space movement.
These movements, like his work, are primarily motivated by the question of how art can continually shift perception, pointing us back to the elasticity of time and light.
North Carolina Museum of Art, USA
October 2014 - January 2015
Curated by Cora Fisher
The exhibition is supported by The Danish Arts Council.
For his first solo museum exhibition in the United States, several series of photographs and films are shown together.
The artist has also created two light and color installations that reach beyond the discrete image to envelop the viewer and choreograph shadows.
In the obscurity of the darkroom, Salto casts light on photosensitive materials, inserting body into the composition between exposures. Chance tempers the discipline of his working process, which is calibrated to the medium at hand—whether that is analog (celluloid) film or handmade laminated 35mm slides, objects casting shadows, or light itself.
Salto draws upon modernism’s language of abstraction and, above all, its restless spirit of experimentation.
His work is kindred to artists of international movements of the 20th and 21st centuries such as Bauhaus, the Zero Group and, more unexpectedly, the American Light and Space movement.
These movements, like his work, are primarily motivated by the question of how art can continually shift perception, pointing us back to the elasticity of time and light.
North Carolina Museum of Art, USA
October 2014 - January 2015
Curated by Cora Fisher
The exhibition is supported by The Danish Arts Council.
Polarized Geometric Color Performance, 2014, 160 slides, Two modified slide-projectors, generative loop, dimensions variable
Installation view, Emil Salto: Light Forms, 2014-15, North Carolina Museum of Art. North Carolina, USA
Mobile, 2014, Site-specific installation, Metal rods and hand- cast weights, chiffon fabric, string, two studio lamps, 6 x 9.1 x 4.57 meters
Mute Science, 2009, Unique photograms on baryta paper, 5 /40,6 x 30,5 cm
Camera test, 2014, 8 mm black & white film transferred to HD, silent, dimensions variable, dur. 3 min. loop
X-Ray Eyes, (Egon Salto 1978, Emil Salto 2013), Emil Salto, 2014, Unique analog prints on Fiber-base paper from 35 mm Color slides , 24 x 34 cm