The Guardian - 31.08.2019

(ff) #1

Section:GDN 1J PaGe:8 Edition Date:190831 Edition:01 Zone: Sent at 30/8/2019 16:32 cYanmaGentaYellowbla



  • The Guardian Sat urday 31 Aug ust 2019


8 Obituaries


I


n February 1955 the Greek
artist Takis stood bored on
the platform at Calais train
station. He was travelling
back to Paris from London,
where he had had his fi rst
solo exhibition, but his train
was delayed. His eyes fell on
a trackside signal, a metal upright
pole with fl ashing lights at the top.
Mesmerised , he began to mentally
catalogue all the other signals,
aerials and signs that scattered the
terminal. When he eventually got
home, and despite the success of
his fi gurative sculpture to date, he
resolved that his art would thereon
include elements of movement
and light.
Takis , who has died aged 93,
was a pioneer of kinetic art , using
electricity, magnetism, sound and
other unseen forces to create work
that ranged from sculpture and
public art to performance. Signals

Takis


Creator of kinetic art


using the forces of


electricity, magnetism,


light and sound


became his best known work, a
series of sculptures developed over
the next fi ve decades that would
include motors, bulbs and fi reworks.
“Before long, my Signals were
transformed from railway signals
into rockets, antennae and radio
receivers. Travelling often by
aeroplane, I was always delighted
by the aerodromes and their giant
radars which turned slowly, seeking
out the metallic objects which glide
in space. It is as though they were
monstrous instruments intercepting
cosmic events,” he wrote in 1961.
Triple Signal ( 1955) feature d
three tensile steel rods reminiscent
of radio aerials. Firework Signal, a
public performance in the streets
of Paris in 1957, involved a giant
sparkler mounted on a 3-metre
pole. In 1987, 39 Signal sculptures,
some more than 9 metres high,
were installed permanently in
the Esplanade de La Défense in

Paris. The following year Takis was
commissioned to make a similar
work for the Seoul Games.
As well as light, magnetism was
an enduring obsession. In 1963, his
friend the American author William
Burroughs wrote in an exhibition
text: “Takis is working with and
expressing in his sculpture thought
forms of metal ... you can hear metal
think in the electromagnetic fi elds .”
The fi rst of his Murs Magnétiques
were made in 1958 : a series of
monochrome paintings in front
of which hung cone-shaped or
cylindrical steel objects from
invisible thread. A magnet hidden
behind the canvas would propel
these mobiles towards the painted
surface. An early version of his
Sculptures Télémagnétiques,
or Télésculptures, featured a
nail suspended in mid-air by a
magnet. In Magnetic Fields (1969),
currently part of an exhibition of
the artist’s work at Tate Modern in
London , a pendulum swung by a
gallery attendant sets off a wave of
movement through a forest of fl oor-
standing metal rods.
An argument in the late 1950s
with Yves Klein over the French
artist’s attempt to patent the use of
magnets led to Takis staging The
Impossible – Man in Space, at Galerie
Iris Clert, in Paris. The performance
involved a powerful magnet that
suspended the South African poet
Sinclair Beiles in mid-air. Beiles was
to read an anti-nuclear manifesto,
but fell to the ground after the
fi rst sentence: “I am a sculpture.”
According to the critic Guy Brett, the
performance “represented a kind
of collision between three worlds:
the world of art, that of science and
contemporary reality”.
Born Panayiotis Vassilakis in
Athens , Takis was the sixth of
seven children of Alexandra (nee
Leontaritsou) and Athanasios
Vassilakis. His father had r un a
successful property empire but the
fortune was lost during the Greco-
Turkish war. In 1942, as the Axis
occupation solidifi ed in Greece, the
17-year-old joined the resistance
movement the National Republican
Greek League , or EDES. After a year
a rival resistance group, the more
radical Greek People’s Liberation
Army (ELAS) enlisted Takis to spy
on EDES. By 1945 he had publicly
switched sides to ELAS, to become
a leader in its youth wing, which, as
Greece fell into civil war, earned him
a six-month prison sentence.
On release, with little in the way
of formal education, Takis made his
fi rst artwork, two busts, inspired
by seeing sculptures by Picasso
and Giacometti at the American
Cultural Center in Athens in 1951.
As he fell into artistic circles,

From top: works
in the current
Takis exhibition
at Tate Modern,
London,
including a
2-metre Gong,
1978, made
from the rusted
wall of a tanker,
and a moving
Electromagnetic
Sphere, 1979;
the Takis
Foundation in
Athens; the artist
with work he
carried out on
the Athens metro
GUY BELL/REX/
SHUTTERSTOCK, AP,
MENIA KOULI

Signals became
his best-known
work, a series of
sculptures that would
include motors, bulbs
and fi reworks

RELEASED BY "What's News" vk.com/wsnws TELEGRAM: t.me/whatsnws

Free download pdf