Art review: Robert Seidel at Young Projects
Robert Seidel’s first solo show in the U.S., at Young Projects, is an immersive experience, a sensuous dip into light, color, movement, sound and change. The show contains a dozen short videos and video installations by the German artist, dating from 2002 to the present. Some appear on monitors, some on screens or walls, and some are projected onto paper sculptures. Whether you watch a single piece from start to finish or wander continually among them, the effect is largely the same and largely intriguing.
Individually, and as a group, the pieces unfurl painterly impressions and inky, calligraphic hints. They comprise a fluid archive of sensations. “E3,” the earliest work in the show, is a three-minute sequence of chromatic progressions and dissolutions, pulsing mutations in red and black. The action speeds up and slows down, the imagery swelling and contracting in a compelling, richly disorienting fashion. This is animated painting of the most ephemeral sort, yielding neither narrative nor finished image, but an ongoing chronicle of form in motion.
Seidel infuses digital media with the authenticity of the handmade mark, and further grounds his work in references to nature, whether through bird sounds or the paper sculptures that resemble feathers and shells or are based on pathways of burrowing bark beetles. Where they are combined, the objects and projections integrate awkwardly, though brief, mesmerizing passages occur when colored light dances through the sculpted or laser-cut paper. Seidel’s stream of visual consciousness is well worth dipping into.
-- Leah Ollman
Young Projects, Pacific Design Center, 8687 Melrose Ave., (323) 377-1102, through May 14. By appointment on Saturday. Closed Sunday and Monday. www.youngprojectsgallery.com
Image: Robert Seidel, Chiral, Young Projects









Really, another useless review. How does Mr. Seidel's wrok compare or contrast to other painter's of his genre? What genre is he defining? Was there a particular piece stronger thanothers at the show? Does he acheive better results with Paper pieces vs. Video Installation vs. whatever. These one page quips are becoming very superficial.
Sincerely,
Please give us more!
Posted by: Brent J. Michael,MD | April 30, 2011 at 03:46 AM
Leah,
You're really not going to print my comment? A nobody like me actually bothers you? I must be speaking the truth.
Posted by: william wray | May 03, 2011 at 11:02 PM
Amazing show!
Posted by: scott | May 04, 2011 at 02:33 AM