"Charles Gaines Designs an Art Lecture Series That's Open to the Public," by Matt Stromberg, Hyperallergic
Covering aesthetics and critical theory in art, the talks offer the public a chance to hear the artist discuss topics that are normally reserved for his classes at the California Institute of the Arts.
Charles Gaines is a seminal figure in second-wave conceptualism, building on the legacy of artists like Sol Lewitt and Joseph Kosuth to consider the imperfect relationship between representation and perception. His signature “Gridworks,” which date back to the mid-70s, are photo-based works upon which the artist lays a numbered grid, sometimes on a plexiglas sheet mounted above the original image. Gaines often colors the squares following the numerical series, collapsing representational, logical, and aesthetic systems in a process that minimizes the artist’s hand. His at Hauser & Wirth’s Los Angeles outpost features new watercolor “Gridworks” based on images of palm trees from Palm Canyon near Palm Springs. These are accompanied by the latest in his Manifestosseries, which transcribes revolutionary manifestos into musical notation, translating one form of communication into another.
In conjunction with the exhibition, Gaines will be presenting a 10-part lecture series titled . Covering aesthetics and critical theory in art, the talks offer the public a chance to hear the artist discuss topics that are normally reserved for his classes at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts), where he is on the faculty. Beginning this Thursday, the events are free but is required.