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RITA
ROHLFING´S MARVELS OF SPACE
Gabriele Uelsberg, Direktorin Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn
The
artist Rita Rohlfing does not make it easy for any observer or interpreter
to ascribe her artistic endeavour to any one genre.
She is a passionate painter who engages in a dialogue with colour.
She paints, without however producing paintings in the traditional
sense. She is a sculptor creating monumental sculptures which nonetheless
never seem to have a fixed shape and which project their volume
not outwards but inwards.
She is an architect who always defines herself in space, which she
structures and questions, but without creating fresh utilisable
spaces, rather she reduces the space by spaces which are inaccessible.
The exclusive desire to fix the incomprehensible nature of space
and universe in the two-dimensional system of a canvas ceased long
ago to be enough for the artist Rita Rohlfing. Once she had taken
the values of the classical picture to their extremes, and, by refracting,
inclining and successively arching the flat canvas, extended her
paintings into plastic space, the possibilities of the canvas picture
were to a great extent consciously exhausted. From this it appears
inevitable that since the mid nineties her work has acquired the
firm tendency to abandon for good the constraints of the flat picture
and to transpose the painting direct into space.
Since then Rita Rohlfing has constructed coloured spaces combining
sculptural and pictorial elements in such a manner that each in
its separate components heightens the other, creating a third element
which is essentially space and colour. This insubstantial colour
space is also evident in the last three installations to be found
in various places.
In the Oberhausen production called transparenzen (‘transparencies’)
Rita Rohlfing ran through the entire spectrum of her space creations.
In the middle she installed her big ‘inaccessible’ space
cube, inside which the observer encounters a mysterious colour corpus
which he cannot fathom, far less enter. When looking at Farbraum
(‘Colour Space’) the visitor perceives colour as lighter
than the air surrounding him. The colouring, weightless and hardly
bearing on the space structure, appears to thrust outwards. Like
a captive colour mist, there surges an endlessly variegated red,
virtually spilling out of the frame. As well as the various intensities
of red encountered by the observer, the interior, constantly forcing
itself outwards through the veil-like glass, reveals itself as space
within space, suggesting a maze of colours and approaches.
Against this larger-than-life space cube Rohlfing places her space
loop, which with its inner and outer elements, both reflective and
dull, coloured and metallic, invite the observer to a relatively
intimate view opening the space more fully and restoring some of
its ‘accessibility’.
The third setting of this installation, AMBIVALENZ I/II (‘Ambivalence
I/II’) consists of the grey pictures which with their monumental
shapes and sloping edges recall earlier works; in a sense they put
segments on to the wall surfaces, projecting the space inwards from
the walls. Here the installation is also completed by those metallic-coloured
pictures leaning on the wall and which appear to partly ‘protected’
by a frosted sheet of perspex from the room and its preconditions.
Here again the room is extended into the wall and out from it into
the surrounding space, thematic and clearly intelligible.
With her installation Rita Rohlfing occupied the room as a continuum
and reconfigurated it as a constantly changing body of colour showing
also varied and related tones. The spectrum found in Oberhausen
is deliberately many-faceted and exhausts the possibilities of perception
of the room by contrast as well.
In the Artothek in Cologne she exhibited her installation ANSCHEINEND
‘Apparently’, in which the dimensions of the tall room,
where daylight enters only through a row of windows at the top,
were very subtly altered and reproportioned. At the middle of the
installation there was an aluminium cube on the floor, its upper
surface in frosted perspex barely offering a view of something inside,
coloured in various tones of red and showing angles shifting against
each other. The contrast between the outer aluminium surfaces of
the sculpture, where the smoothness permits reflection, and the
blurred appearance of the space behind the pane especially catches
one’s attention which moves inwards from the surface, towards
the imagination. Rohlfing takes up the ambiguity of the material,
contrasting her shining red cube with an aluminium frame which almost
incidentally appears on the high wall of the room. One’s view
of the sharply defined aluminium shape is however in turn ‘disrupted’
by a frosted perspex pane in a metal frame placed before it at a
distance of 55 cm and which allows a glimpse behind it only if the
observer himself changes position. The cooler grey blurs together
with the subdued red into a colour harmony which ‘resonates’
through the tall room in the Artothek, forcing it into a flowing
variation. Here, colour becomes a component of space, ceasing to
be a physical condition or attribute. Through Rita Rohlfing’s
installation the room acquires a quality of immateriality which
diffuses from within the corpus into the observer’s very space,
making it part of the installation itself.
As a contrast, in the Ludwig Forum für International Kunst
(Forum for International Art) in Aachen, Rita Rohlfing developed
an overall concept in which the architectural element expands without
interruption from a spatial form into sulpture, giving rise to a
three-dimensional but inaccessible spatial form. In this installation,
called Zwielicht (‘Twilight’), Rita Rohlfing uses big
sheets of matt-finish perspex to create an ‘exhibition room’
which however is not open for the observer to enter. Inside this
inaccessible space there are tones of red and architectural elements
discernible to the observer only in shadowy fashion and which, like
a living organism of colour, appear to have a life of their own.
The light shining through the two glass walls into the resultant
space allows the colour to strike outwards through the frosted panes,
bathing the anteroom of the installation in intense red. The work
consisted of two room-sized panes of frosted perspex and a dividing
wall, part of the structure which normally separates two rooms.
In her installation Rita Rohlfing however creates the impression
that between the two there is a continuous space stretching both
ways. But there was no way to see inside, since in the work the
transparency was reduced to vague shadows of variegated colours.
The spatial colour corpus of the installation becomes a sculptured
whole before which the observer moves and which he nonetheless experiences
as a mass encircling him. The red penetrates so forcefully into
his space that he becomes part of the sculpture without being able
himself to enter it. The concrete interior of the spatial colour
structure is only vaguely discernible because, through the artist’s
use of a further structural device in which she sets big coloured
panels against each other within the space, any attempt to look
inside is diverted and resolves itself as a harmony of red tones
of different degrees of warmth. An exact colour concept results,
which Rohlfing has precisely planned. The use of intense colours
has facilitated the work’s light effect and its ‘radiation’.
‘Space, colour, light lose their individual meaning, appearing
as ‘twilight’ which seizes us in its thrall." *
The colour corpus of the Zwielicht (‘Twilight’) installation
seems in its dimension and depth to be indeterminable. If the observer
of Zwielicht (‘Twilight’) stands for some time in front
of the resultant spatial colour corpus, he almost becomes a part
of it, while it in turn continuously changes in substance and aspect.
Further, he is imperceptibly ‘absorbed’ into this imprecisely
perceived interior with its refractions and seeming paradoxes, which
takes over not only part of his awareness but also spreads into
his whole thinking, while the eyes look for an answer. This insubstantial
colour space created by Rita Rohlfing is admittedly an almost hermetic
and selfsufficient mass, but in the perceptive process it becomes
an open if not physically accessible continuum in which the observer
almost becomes a component whose space is penetrated by the colour
and deep into which his seeing and thinking both plunge.
This symbiosis of seeing and thinking, awareness and reflexion,
is a central theme in Rita Rohlfing’s artistic work. It is
a theme which she addresses through painting and interior architecture
in constantly renewed and astonishingly fresh installations, engaging
the observer in the continuum of experience.
*
Gabriele Teuteberg, Rita Rohlfing – Zwielicht, in: farbecht
(‘colour-fast’), Ludwig Forum für Internationale
Kunst, Aachen 2003
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