ABSTRACT
LINES
Process and Harmony
SOMETIMES A DRAWN LINE sings on the surface of its support.
Sometimes it smolders like a deep shadow. It can proclaim
mood, silence, and sensitivity with its thickness and pressure
of touch. A line can be finished in a second, or, as Twombly
shows us opposite, it can keep reforming through the inherent
repetition of a process. A Neolithic chalk tablet bears cut lines
that were slowly carved. Below, Mamoru Abe prepares an
image that will appear through the chemistry of iron, water,
and patient watching. Abe's physical drawing is a sculptural
installation. Damp Japanese paper was laid over carefully
arranged iron bars. Moisture produced rust, staining red-
brown lines into the white surface. Five forged steel shapes,
akin to stones in a Zen garden, sit in silent harmony, quoting
ink marks on a page. Twombly's mesmeric wax line worked
over house paint is like a signature, rhythmically engaged with
itself, scrolling across the canvas in an intimate crescendo.
MAMORU ABE
Japanese sculptor and installation artist, and Assistant
Professor of Fine Art at Fukuoka University. Abe
works with materials such as soil, forged steel, brass,
ice, salt, and plaster in galleries and landscapes. He
travels widely to research ancient sacred sites.
Lines, tone, and texture Pillars of the gallery are made part
of this drawing by their inclusion in the paper. This amplifies
their bracing separation of the floor from the ceiling. Iron rods
reaching from beneath the paper rest within the framelike
rim of floor space. Changes in tone, texture, and temperature
between paper, iron, and wood are also part of the work.
The Physical Space
1990
30x 30 ft (914x914 cm)
MAMORU ABE