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Late last year British born artist Adrian Hall
returned to New Zealand to reconstruct his work
Low Tide. It was being presented at Auckland's
New Gallery as part of Action Replay, an exhibition
revisiting New Zealand post object art of the
1970s. Hall played a decisive role in this neglected
chapter of New Zealand's art history. As a visiting
lecturer at Elam School of Fine Arts from 1971
to 1972, he brought internationally current
ideas into the local scene. Hall's 1971 show
The Plasma Cast Iron Foam Company Presents Adrian
Reginald Hall, which included Low Tide, was
one of the most audacious, unexpected and influential
sculpture shows of the decade here. Wystan Curnow
and Robert Leonard talked to Adrian Hall before
he left Auckland, to return to Sydney, where
he currently lives.
Before that I'd been at a very traditional
art school in the West Country. Then I had a
year out working and making art in Somerset
before I got into the Royal College. It was
the work I did that year in Somerset that got
me in. I spent three years at the Royal College,
1964 to 1967, very intense. Culbert and Apple
had already gone through. Victor Burgin was
a year ahead of me. John Panting, Nigel Hall,
Terry Powell and Steve Furlonger were among
my contemporaries. Hockney had done his gold
lame suit graduation, and he was down the corridor
doing an edition of The Rake's Progress about
his trip to New York. Very smart. The Royal
College had just decided to make art a respectable
intellectual pursuit. They'd employed Iris Murdoch
to run a philosophy course. That absolutely
mortified me because I'd never met anyone as
formidable as that. Being locked in a small
room for two or three hours at a time while
she chain-smoked Capstans and monologued was
something else, but it was a very strong experience.
She'd been a student of Wittgenstein's and introduced
me to the Tractatus and The Blue Book.
No, I was involved in its first manifestation
as AMM Music with Keith Rowe and Eddie Prevost
Later Cornelius Cardew. We performed in my kitchen
in Putney. At a previous place, Keith Rowe had
been my flatmate (as was John Surman who went
on to be a saxophone virtuoso), and Mike Westbrook
had lived around the corner. It was a jazz milieu.
The AMM performances involved a period of quasi-meditation,
people picking around their instruments in various
ways, then attempting to establish a sense of
community through the activity of making sound.
Some of the instruments were jazz derived. Keith
Rowe had saved up for years to buy a Barney
Kessel guitar, but and, despite winning
the Downbeat magazine poll for best jazz guitarist
within months he had sawn it in half
and was playing it with hacksaws. My own forte
as guest artist was the broken milk bottle (although
later in New Zealand with Phil Dadson I would
play gas cylinder and valve). Some AMM music
could have been described as trance music, sometimes
the performances were violent, sometimes there
would be deliberate humour, sometimes there
would be laughter anyway, but the performances
were always very probing: like watching a string
of meteorites. Inevitable. I pulled away because
I wanted to go a different way. They were very
serious musicians and I was a very serious artist,
but I was still a big fan. And the jazz thing
has always been there in my work - innovation
within and without, forms the city-wall.
In the second year at the College, Peter Blake
heard I was looking for a fabricating job, and
he introduced me a strange woman called Yoko
Ono. This was long before she became a household
name. I did things for her for a couple of years,
a lot of fabrication and organisation. Yoko's
single-mindedness was a big influence on me,
her unfazedly setting up an antagonistic, potentially
dangerous relationship with her audience. She
kept saying these things were beautiful. She
recognised that provocation was a necessary
part of the process of engaging with real life.
I remember one performance, Tuna Fish Sandwich,
maybe ten of us sitting on the edge of a stage
in a theatre in London imagining we were eating
a tuna fish sandwich, looking impassively at
an increasingly angry audience.
I guess you could now class them as primary
structures. They were paintings which were not
paintings; objects which were not objects
they were experiential. You could walk through
them, or not. What really kicked me off was
Le Courbusier's book The Modulor, his concern
to design architectural spaces around the proportions
and movements of the body, and the writings
of Frank Lloyd Wright and John Cage, who Yoko
had introduced me to at an interactive dance
performance. Later on the writings of the phenomenologist
Merleau-Ponty were important. What I was making
wasn't considered legitimate as painting at
the College at the time, and I spent three years
resisting them wanting to transfer me to Furniture.
It didn't occur to them or I, that I might be
making sculpture.
Two works were included in the 1967 Young Contemporaries
show at the Tate. I showed a slide last night
of Yoko at the Tate standing next to the piece
named after her, Just for Yoko: She Knows. It
was a boxlike archway you could bend down and
go under, and when you came up on the other
side there was this box form hung on the wall
like a painting. The back side of the archway
was luminescent industrial orange, so it was
quite an experience to bend over, pass through
and rise up in a space bathed in colour. Yoko
had given me a copy of her book Grapefruit,
in which she wrote about how entering a Japanese
tea house required humility, because you had
to bow down to pass through the low doorway.
And she said it would be good if all the politicians
in the world had to pass through the door of
a tea house and be humble before talking. A
bit of serendipity, her giving me that book
while I was working on that piece.
Yoko's husband at that time, Tony Cox, saw
what I was doing and told me I should go to
the States and see the work of Donald Judd and
Robert Morris, and that Yale would be a good
place to do it they visited the school
regularly. So I followed his advice and got
accepted. I wrote dozens of letters of application
to try to get the funds to get to the States,
and finally I got a scholarship.
The Sculpture department at Yale was small
but vital. Within a month I was getting drunk
with Judd in his loft in New York, and that
went on for about two years. Judd was incredibly
generous and very interested in young artists.
And Robert Morris was another one we
tried to get him as the new Head of Sculpture.
Each week another now famous artist would visit,
the likes of Christo and Lucas Samaras. Through
these visitors we were drawn into the New York
art mileu New York was only two hours
from New Haven. Most weekends were spent in
Manhattan, gallery hopping or schmoozing, or
catching the latest Warhol movie as it rolled
out of the Factory.
While I was at Yale I found another fabricating
job, one which actually paid good money, working
for Naum Gabo. Gabo liked the fact I was Cornish.
He used to talk about travelling across Europe
with his cardboard kitset version of Head in
a suitcase. At his place in Connecticut I helped
fabricate a huge version which he presented
to the people of Denmark in appreciation of
their helping him during his flight as a refugee
during the War. The notion of Head in a cardboard
suitcase, flatly constructed, easily put together
and taken apart, has stuck in my mind ever since
as a masterpiece of practicality and invention.
The New Zealand graphic designer Graham Percy,
who I was with at the Royal College and on the
boat with to New York, he put Jim on to me.
Jim was staying at the YMCA and I casually,
politely suggested, "Stay with us, but
we've only got a sofa", and he said, "I'll
take it." So we had Jim over for four or
five days taking notes, and he got to meet various
luminaries of that time, like Sheldon Nodelman,
who was an influential young art writer who
brought a phenomenological perspective to bear
on abstract painting.
By the time I got the call I was lecturing
at UCLA. I had came in as a lecturer in the
Design school. The teaching situation was impossible
I had hundreds of students. I attempted
to make sense of it for myself and the students
by instituting group projects which were synergystic,
involving the available resources of the university
anechonic chambers in Physics, the film
library and the physical resources of
Los Angeles itself, including the telephone
system. I remember a laundrette event involving
chocolate ice cream and blueberry pie, testing
various washing powders. We did a magazine on
the gestetner [check spelling]. We did a James
Dean performance event at the Griffith Park
Observatory.
Yeah, The Panthers had become increasingly
militarised, and shoot-outs, assassinations
and legitimised murder had become normal. The
atmosphere was pregnant with fear, anger, and
indeed loathing. The Los Angeles Tac Squad had
rioted across the UCLA campus after the academics
and students struck over the events at Kent
State University, where four students had been
killed by the National Guard. In 1969 Ronald
Reagan was Chair of the Board of Regents at
the University of California he was a
figure of seemingly universal derision. No one
could fortell his presidential future. The board
had tried to supress the unrest by sacking 160
lecturers under 30, but after they fired me
they hired me back. We left LA on New Years
Eve 1970.
After LA it was a profound relief to be in
New Zealand. I could touch reality. I could
get to a beach with ease Takapuna beach
was minutes away not like in LA where
such excursions had to be planned, navigated
across miles of freeway in Los Angeles. Returning
home from the studio at night I could stroll
and wonder. Tidal phenomena, the jetsum, and
the marks of ages became simple evidence to
dwell upon.
Yeah. That reality imported into the gallery.
Low Tide was a 7 by 7 field of concrete foundation
piles, and they were painted with green resin
up to their notches. Six rows filled the alcove,
while one row "seeped" through the
dividing wall. The resin was very painterly
it was a joke about painting. It was
like dank, gravity stricken, seaweed. Foundations
of existence and art-history, and my memories
of crab-scrabbling as a sodden child... I wanted
the work to draw on the memory banks of the
viewer-participant, to create a sense of rightness.
The installation was specific to the space.
"Site-specific" was an unknown term
then, as was "installation", but they
weren't unknown ideas. So it had to be done
differently at the New Gallery. It had to be.
It was a bigger space, and there was nothing
like an alcove to contain the grid, so I did
something different, running the grid at an
angle through two rooms, again seeping through
a wall. This time a 9 x 9 grid. Almost identical
to the first notional scribbles I drew on the
plan when Wystan introduced the idea to me in
Sydney.
As soon as I had arrived Jim said I needed
to meet Rodney Kirk Smith at Barry Lett Gallery,
and that I was having this show there
in four months time!
The show really comes out of
the blue. There was nothing like it in New Zealand
before. It was so complete a statement that
it must have been the result of a substantial
build up.
Absolutely, the Lett show was a crystallisation
of probably ten years of work. I'd been doing
loose stuff with AMM in London, and that was
in that box, and then there was another box
with stuff that was rigorous and geometric,
the sculpture. But with the Lett show I dispensed
with all those divisions. It was the first time
I really kicked the walls of the boxes out of
the way. Before that I'd always had that New
York sense of propriety in my work, the well
maintained oeuvre you couldn't play too
much, it had to be clear, tidy, sequential.
Getting better at less and less. You only have
to compare the career of my friend Fred Sandback,
and how he maintained that kind of Morandi continuum
over 30 odd years, to my careering with its
leaps and jumps and backtracks.
There were two pieces. One, with a string line
across the space from side to side. It had plumb
bobs at either end, one at eye height, the other
at hand height. The other string went from the
back to the front of the space, from inside
to outside. Inside, it finished with plumb bob
hovering over a concrete disk. And if you followed
the string back all the way along down the stairs,
and out of the gallery, it was tied to a big
bolt set in lead on the pavement. The energies
were earthed, but it was a bogus earthing. And
the string bounced around the gallery and delineated
the space. The plumb bobs were like absolutes,
absolute truths that other recognitions could
be read against. I suppose the difference between
my strings and Sandback's were that his were
elegant and art, and mine were straight off
the building site.
There were two stacks of bricks under pressure,
contained by steel bars at either side to o
stop them bowing out, with a cable that ran
around the outside and underneath. The whole
thing was held in place by the tension generated
by its own weight compressed energy.
My height, my width. Pillar was a companion
piece, a giant paperweight, two stacks of bricks
suspended in resin, with spaces between the
bricks where the cement might have been. Bricks
in aspic. They said it was impossible... I made
a kind of giant fish tank to cast it in. There
was a nice contrast: the bricks in Life Size
were explosive and hanging, in Pillar they were
encased and floating.
That was absolutely it, because that was the
process, pour an inch of resin a day and hope
it would stop smelling in time for the show.
There was a lot of smell in the show when it
opened.
It was cheques tracing two years of my life
in New Haven, every cheque written, all in sequence.
At the time American banks would return your
cheques with your statement at the end of the
month. I'd opened the account in New Haven with
a change of visa and a payment to the immigration
board. Then there are cheques for the rent,
for the occasional substance, donations to the
Black Panther party, lots of liquor stores...
The last cheque was for a trucking company to
take my stuff to Los Angeles, and then the account
was closed. Everything, all life is here.
This is a difficult one. One day I was in the
studio, it was just before the Lett show happened,
and there was a knock on the door and in came
a friend. It was the very day after his wife
had committed suicide and he sat down with me
and we shared a beer he was devastated.
It was a very awkward occasion, as you might
imagine. And I found myself looking at the mess
on the floor. That chaos was indicative of what
my friend had brought in, and I found it true
and moving, and to make the work I simply moved
all that stuff onto a metal plinth. In the show
there was so much stuff that was ordered and
structured and at times authoritative, and it
became essential that I put this work in also
to demonstrate the randomness of experience.
It was dangerous, because there were bare live
electric wires on a metal platform. Moomin Momma
was a matriarchal comic strip character of immense
stupidity.
Yeah, one of the best examples of that in the
show was Silent Wall. It was a hollow stud wall,
clad with four standard 8 x 4 foot sheets of
gib, with one stroke of a caulking gun on each
side, cleaned up by one stroke of a palette
knife. They looked like Barnett Newman stripes.
It was called Silent Wall because the hollow
was filled with foam. Sculptures like this were
absolutely related to the everyday world. My
work may have been involved in ideas about transcendence
and personal development, but I made the decision
back at Yale that it was not about virtuoso
performance in any way; it was not about the
sublime. It refered to working and to working
class life. I've always been able to make a
living with my hands, at that time very much
with my hands. I've always carried with me the
sense of poetry that my father would have when
he was wiring a house, his nagging sense of
precision in arranging screws at that angle,
and putting electrical line this way, and holding
the hammer properly and letting the tools work
for you. The poetry of the artisan provided
a resonance and a matrix more valuable than
virtuoso performance. I've always been very
particular about the qualities of the material.
Things are put together quite obsessively. My
neuroses won't permit ragged edges that aren't
considered.
I used 8 x 4 boards again. I liked the way
they were standard. They originally made them
that size because that was the size of the early
railroad boxcars they moved them in. As a builder
I was used to moving them, they seemed related
to the body. And I had another minor epiphany
when I realised I could cut the sheets diagonally
and reassemble the pieces to create a pyramid
exactly my height... Pyramid had light bulbs
running down its edges on a dimmer hooked to
a timer. Over 24 hours the bulbs slowly brightened
up, then dimmed away. Full brightness was synced
up with high noon over Cheops. It was a little
joke about pyramid cosmologies of the time.
I had in the back of my mind a cartoon from
the Yale School of Art and Architecture journal
Prospecta which showed the Great Pyramid and
someone talking to the Pharaoh: "This is
all very well Ramaeses, but let's plug it in
and see if it works". It had its serious
side too. You couldn't see the lights change,
it was so slow. But as you walked around the
show and looked at the other things, you could
feel something happening. It provided significant
if barely perceptible experiential change in
the space, but you couldn't put you finger on
it. Of course Pyramid was only fully lit when
the gallery was shut. I think humour is another
signature you can use: the tragic, the foreboding,
and the humorous. We all cry, we all laugh
I told you I was a soppy humanist. But the Barry
Lett show was the first time I had consciously
employed humour.
With some uneasy bewilderment I felt. Someone
said, "This is all very well Adrian, and
very interesting, but how is anyone supposed
to buy it?" Within the art community some
artists were very interested, for instance Gretchen
Albrecht and Jamie Ross. Gretchen swaped one
of her works for one of mine. I suppose the
thing which exemplified much of the response
and that irritated me was that the humour
particularly the way the opening was presented
as an event seemed to prevent serious
attention being given to the individual works.
Some people were also offended by the art swipes.
There were art jokes. Slab was a painting joke,
an 8 x 4 foam slab. I made a glass mould on
the floor and poured a whole bunch of resin
in and plopped this foam mattress in, let it
all set, and then pulled it all out of the mould.
It produced this fractured, painterly, crisp
surface with a very raw edge. Slab hung from
chains set into the resin. I was playing with
how painters were letting the dribbles show
on the edges of their canvases as a convention
Stella and Mangold were treating their
edges with great particularity.
The Lett show involved works
that operated in a range of registers, with
relays of associations running between them.
And not just the works, but everything that
went with them: the catalogue, the title of
the show, the ritual of the opening, the hanging
devices. That was new here: the exhibition as
a medium.
During the opening toast was served and homemade
fruit-wine. Maree Horner and her friend Jane
were dressed in serving maid outfits with T-shirts
with PCIFCo across the front. And they greeted
people and gave them PCIFCo badges as they came
in, so every individual was made part of the
conspiracy.
Irritation with bureaucracy. The controlling
things in all our lives bogus authority.
The little catalogue pamphlet was printed on
forgery-proof, chemically imprinted, cheque
paper. It included an entry ticket and a copy
of a silly and pompous reference that had been
given to me by that provincial West Country
art school. My California driver's licence was
reproduced on the cover, as if the catalogue
were a certificate of authenticity, and the
show title included my middle name, as if it
were a legal document. Everything was underlined
six times to say this is absolutely official.
It was the spoofery of a certificate of authenticity
upon a certificate of authenticity upon a rubber
stamp of a signature. And probably this was
a response to the high art of New York, which
I had already decided was a very tight and provincial
and hermetic, and at odds with my desire to
make the art process an engagement with real
life and real human beings.
Of course I'd been to the big Duchamp show
at the Tate, the one organised by Richard Hamilton
and with his reconstruction of The Large Glass.
I'd also run into Hamilton during a tour of
that show. The depth of cryptography in Duchamp,
the layering, really interested me. And in Los
Angeles I'd purchased a copy of the big facsimile
edition of the notes to The Large Glass and
I brought it with me to New Zealand and lent
it around. I lent people books on Wittgenstein
too.
I have to admit I was fairly arrogant. New
Zealand was the bottom of the world. But when
I arrived it was a revelation. I was given carte
blanche by Jim. I was given a studio and I went
to look for students. The first people I got
into conversation with were Maree Horner, Angela
Day and Malcolm Ross. Malcolm was actually holed
up in his studio in a separate building, and
I was taken to meet him, and we had this fragmented
exchange over a couple of years. It soon became
clear that I had nothing to feel complacent
about, being nibbled at and challengedas I was.
People were interested, they were also smart.
It was a community of committed individuals.
Being there set in my mind an idea of the art
school as a place where artists at different
levels of experience enjoy a free exchange of
ideas and information. Trust came into it. Jim
took upon himself the role of facilitator, allowing
us to be as preposterous and silly as we wanted.
He was in the office phoning the airforce to
get Phil Dadson flown to Fiji to meet Indian
drummers, and he was pleasantly harassing Fletchers
for support for the Bledisloe Place project.
I was some kind of catalyst, and I recognised
at the time that this was my role. There was
this flat bureaucratic system and we just got
on with the business. It was a very special
couple of years.
Adrian Hall, January, 2000.
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