NATHAN HYLDEN
GOES ON

KÖNIG BERLIN
14 NOVEMBER 2015 – 24 JANUARY 2016

What’s to distinguish the coat of paint from code? The procedure of painting from the condition of encryption that saturates and conditions the canvas with – if not ‘meaning’ – then a succession of on/off switches: risk and/or collapse, blankness and/or figuration, the singular and/or the serial, the manual and/or the mechanical, paint and/or more paint?

The paintings of Nathan Hylden take as a starting point the canvas’s indexical pre-condition. The painting looks at itself and sees that it’s coated and encoded, spliced, sampled, and looping itself. Hylden’s conceptual, yet lush, nearly-abstract group of paintings are like test strips for methods of effacement, the brushwork of brushing-off. Gesture becomes something closer to the algorithm, and the process closer to the script.

For GOES ON, his third exhibition at KÖNIG GALERIE, Hylden has grouped three, related sets of paintings, in which a recursive condition of duplication and splicing exists within and without the canvas. GOES ON means: that the painting goes on the wall just as paint goes to canvas, that (the) painting goes on, and that a condition of serial surplus (on and on) has met the shrugging of shy redundancy in and of the works.

One series, of the three presented and interspersed with one another (all works are untitled) at the gallery, was produced as follows: Hylden laid two canvasses side-by-side and coated both (as if one) with surgy, metallic, opalescent strokes using a large, self-made brush. The left-hand canvas was then superimposed over the right-hand canvas, after which Hylden coated both with spray paint. Like a code or loop, the dark bars mark one canvas’s imprint on the other. The result evokes the atmospheric cancellation of a solar eclipse, but also the scanning bars of a roll of film, or even a censor bar – all forms where nature and machine edit themselves.

Objects, unlike electronic signals, are always ‘on’, whether or not we use them. The painting, it's pure if recalcitrant objecthood, can’t be willed ‘off’, although Hylden’s technique of splicing attempts to interrupt the movement of content with the colder remove of the method. Musical registers, filmic time, and the binary condition of data – on, off, cadence, and repetition – are appropriate comparisons: in their compression of time, in their techniques of splicing, notation, and rhythm.

For a second group of works presented here, the digital is not a condition for production, but a kind of excluded middle. For these, murkier, algea-like canvasses, Hylden repeated the mechanical process of superimposition and self-encoding, albeit after identifying the colors used in the first, rosier series and utilizing the inverse color scheme. Added to superimposition, then, is an axis where the painting manipulates or tricks itself anew.

The light bulb in Hylden’s light bulb paintings, meanwhile, has been UV-printed on – the ‘eureka’ or ‘a-ha’ moment of discovery. These are the only captured, or trapped, images in the exhibition. But is there, perhaps, not the canceling import of a memento mori in some of the light bulbs? They could be skulls. The glass cranium is removed, and hence the optical illusion, and ocular rift, of an eyeball, is stripped bare to the pure scaffolding of the socket, which is another word for canvas.

© Text by Pablo Larios

FEATURED ARTIST

NATHAN HYLDEN

Nathan Hylden (b. 1978 in Minnesota, USA) lives and works in Los Angeles, USA. His work deals with issues of temporality and the idea of rationality related to the creative act itself. Playing with codes similar to those that can be met in the cinematographic industry, his pieces are produced as series and follow a very strict creative process. Starting with images of his studio silkscreened on large aluminum plaques, the pieces are then piled up to receive an allotted quantity of paint, applied by spray or brush. Even though they are linked to each other, each tells a particular story and brandishes its own particular density. Each painti...
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