FOUND MONOCHROMES, BY DAVID BATCHELOR, DISCUSSES ABSTRACTION IN THE URBAN LANDSCAPE
Found Monochromes show at HOP project/ CT20 remains on view until November 11th. Curated by Nina Shen-Poblete, the exhibition features an installation on two screens, by David Batchelor, with photographs of blank, white, rectangular panels that he finds in the streets of the cities he visits, from London to Sāo Paulo.
Since 1997, David Batchelor has been photographing blank, white, rectangular panels, while he started looking at how abstraction is embedded in the urban fabric, the series has grown – with more than 600 images – into a far more personal project, a psychological map of each city he visits.
The monochromes of the street are occasional, often inadvertent and always temporary. For Batchelor they are moments of blankness in an otherwise saturated visual landscape; rectangular planes of nothingness that can also appear as voids at the centre of the field of vision. As such they are like errors: a space where there shouldn’t be a space, an absence where there should be a presence.
SERVICE
FOUND MONOCHROMES, by David Batchelor
Dates: 10.22 – 11.11.2021 / Tuesday to Sunday – 11am – 5pm
Where: HOP Projects / CT20