Takis @ Tate Modern

THE SCULPTOR TAKIS ON SHOW AT TATE MODERN 

TAKIS

Over a 70-year career, #takis (Panayiotis Vassilakis, b.1925) has created some of the most innovative art of the 20th century. A sculptor of magnetism, light and sound, he seeks out the essential poetry and beauty of the electromagnetic universe. #takis was one of the most original artistic voices in Europe from the 1960s and remains a pioneering figure today. Bringing together over 80 works, this is Takis’ largest exhibition in the UK to date and includes a rarely-seen Magnetic Fields installation, musical devices generating resonant and random sounds, and forests of his pivotal Signals.

Born in Athens in 1925, #takis is a self-taught artist who moved to Paris in 1954 and became a key figure in the artistic and literary circles of Paris, #london and New York. His inventions earned him the admiration of the international avant-garde, from William S. Burroughs and the American Beat poets to artists including Marcel Duchamp. #takis was at the forefront of kinetic art and pioneered new forms of sculpture, painting and musical structures to harness invisible natural forces. Throughout his career, he produced antennae-like sculptures called Signals – thin, flexible poles topped with found objects or electric lights – which gently sway in response to their surroundings.

His idea for these works emerged while waiting at Calais train station surrounded by ‘monster-eyes’ going on and off in a ‘jungle of iron’. The renowned Signals London gallery and publication (1964-66) was named after Takis’ influential series and became an important meeting place for the transmission of ideas, breaking down boundaries between the arts and sciences.

From the late 1950s, #takis became increasingly fascinated by radar and began exploring magnetism as a way to reinvent sculpture. In 1960, he created the ephemeral action The Impossible – Man in Space, in which he suspended the poet Sinclair Beiles in mid-air through a system of magnets while he recited the poem Magnetic Manifesto. The exhibition includes Takis’ ‘telemagnetic’ works, incorporating metallic objects that float with the use of magnets, such as Magnetic Wall 9 (Red) 1961 where abstract elements hover on the surface of a bright red canvas. #takis was an expert at manipulating electronics and mechanical components to build suspense within his art. Shown in a darkened gallery, the radiant blue light of Télélumière No. 1963-4 crackles with energy. A highlight of the exhibition is Magnetic Fields 1969, on display for the first time since the 1970s, in which magnetic pendulums trigger movement from nearly a hundred sculptures.

Takis sourced many of his materials from military surplus shops and flea markets. From the radio antennas of US army jeeps to salvaged aeroplane gauges, he transformed technologies of warfare into monuments of beauty and contemplation. In his Signals from the 1970s, he incorporated various bomb fragments from the Greek Civil War gathered from the hill around his Athens studio. #takis was also involved in a number of direct political actions, particularly in the late 1960s. He was a leading participant of the Art Workers’ Coalition and his decision to forcefully remove his work from an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York became a rallying point for artist rights. In Athens in 1986, he founded the #takis Foundation – Research Center for the Art and the Sciences, which has been the home of his artistic work and research ever since.

Since 1965, #takis has created new musical devices with magnets and electricity to produce sounds that he speaks of relating to the cosmos, ranging from single notes to thunderous ensembles. At the centre of the exhibition is a gallery dedicated to a sequence of Takis’ Musicals. The exhibition closes with Takis’ Musical Sphere 1985 and Gong 1978, made from the rusted wall of a tanker. 18 recent acquisitions to Tate’s collection will be included in the exhibition, showcasing the range of Takis’ work across his career, purchased with assistance from Tate International Council, Tate Members, Tate Patrons and with Art Fund support.

Takis is co-curated by writer and curator Guy Brett, who was closely involved in Signals #london, and Michael Wellen, Curator, International Art, #tatemodern, with Helen O’Malley, Assistant Curator, #tatemodern. It is accompanied by a catalogue including specially commissioned colour photography and new critical essays. The exhibition is organised by #tatemodern in collaboration with MACBA Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona, where it will open on 21 November 2019, and the Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens, where it will open on 20 May 2020.

www.tate.org.uk

TAKIS PRESS IMAGES

All works by Takis (b.1925) unless otherwise stated

Radar (detail) 1960
Aluminium, magnet, nylon thread
67.5 × 74 × 15 cm
Takis Foundation
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019 Photo: Fay Zervos

Musical Sphere 1985
Aluminium, iron, metal string, metal wire, paint, polyester 160 × 100 × 114 cm
Takis Foundation
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: Hlias Nak

Magnetic Wall 9 (Red) 1961
Acrylic paint on canvas, magnets, copper wire, foam, paint, plastic, steel, synthetic cloth
180 × 220 × 10 cm
Centre Pompidou, Musée national d’art moderne – Centre de création industrielle, Paris
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: Georges Meguerditchian

Magnetic Fields (detail) 1969
Metal, magnets, wire
63.5 × 426.7 × 91.4 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. Partial gift, Robert Spitzer, by exchange, 1970

© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

Telepainting 1959
Acrylic paint on canvas, magnets, nylon thread, steel 28 × 61 × 35 cm
Collection of Liliane Lijn
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: © Tate (Andrew Dunkley and Mark Heathcote)

Télélumière No. 4 (detail) 1963–4
Iron machine parts, light bulbs, wood, brass, steel, electromagnet, string and paint
108×30×32cm,30x60cmapprox.
Tate. Purchased with assistance from Tate International Council, Tate Members, Tate Patrons and with Art Fund support 2019
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: © Tate (Andrew Dunkley and Mark Heathcote)

Signal (detail) 1964–5
Steel, lamp, paint
256×25.5×19.5cm
Tate. Purchased with assistance from Tate International Council, Tate Members, Tate Patrons and with Art Fund support 2019

© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: © Tate (Andrew Dunkley and Mark Heathcote)

Magnetic Ballet 1961
Cork, electromagnet, magnet, nylon thread, steel, wood
45 x 40 x 40 cm approx.
Tate. Purchased with assistance from Tate International Council, Tate Members, Tate Patrons and with Art Fund support 2019
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: © Tate (Andrew Dunkley and Mark Heathcote)

Telepainting 1964
Ceramic, iron, lamps, magnet, nylon thread, plastic, rheostats, steel screwdriver, vinyl, wood
110.1 x 75.2 x 17 cm
Private Collection
© ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2019
Photo: © Tate (Andrew Dunkley and Mark Heathcote)

Clay Perry

Photograph of Takis and Guy Brett 1966 © Clay Perry, England & Co gallery, London

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