ROBERT KINMONT – JUMP

Posted on 2015-03-30

Kinmont maintains that to make art you have to let go of something. It is a little bit like jumping. Yet these pieces advocate a groundedness and patience evidenced in the choice and handling of the materials and in the message. From the paradoxical relationship between jumping and waiting brings an animated tension shared by all the works: a sense of complexity that belies the apparent simplicity of their subject matter.

Sixteen Dirt Roads (2015) presents the gritty substances of a finite number of roads, each subtly different in color, composition and meaning; and each beautifully housed in copper boxes that contrast absolutely with their ashen dusts. Forks (2015) sees four wooden boxes lined in a row. Three of these contain numerous cut branches, such as might be used to make a slingshot or to divine water; the other fork units are of copper piping that have been cut and soldered together to masquerade as wooden forks – an attempt that comically underlines the inherent character of materials and inimitable intricacy of the natural world. trying to understand (2015) consists of three wooden boxes with twenty-four wooden gliders tessellated inside. A super 8 movie filmed in the 1970s depicts the artist’s arduous effort at 10,000 feet to achieve a successful glider flight, contrasting with the sedentary regiments of boxed gliders.

Such works recall Minimalism through their seriality, boxed forms and use of copper while relinquishing any reckoning of the world to the wind. The natural world intervenes in Kinmont’s art, making definitions temporary and hierarchy nonsensical. Instead, as he tells it in a piece from this year, there is no place to rest for the artist – a statement in cursive copper, written forwards and back, upright and upside down that speaks of acceptance as much as of enlightenment.

Opposite – Plumb Bob, 1973/2014

Exhibition runs through to April 30th, 2015

RaebervonStenglin
Pfingstweidstrasse 23 / Welti-Furrer Areal
8005 Zürich
Switzerlan

www.raebervonstenglin.com