Corse, recognized early in her career with inclusions in important exhibitions at the Whitney Museum, LACMA and the Guggenheim, has more recently received wide international acclaim. She has spent the last 50 years creating groundbreaking art that examines the realms of human perception, combining a philosophical quest for the portrayal of the infinite with a highly skilled methodical and scientific rigour. Corse’s fascination with abstraction began early – studying Willem de Kooning, Hans Hofmann and Josef Albers – and in 1964, she moved to Los Angeles to enroll at the Chouinard Art Institute (now the California Institute of the Arts). Corse was one of the few women associated with the California-based Light and Space movement, but while many of the artists moved into sculpture and installation, Corse was focused on painting while discovering unconventional means through which to not just represent, but embody, light.
In the main gallery of the exhibition, the artist will present three works from a new series, including Untitled (Double Cross) (2020). Using a thin mirrored-edge metal sheet, Corse carved the material into a geometric shape and applied it with black acrylic squares, resulting in a dark shimmering double cross shape that emerges from the surrounding white space. The roots of this painting are in a significant work from 1975, Untitled (Black Light Painting, Glitter Series) – recently exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art and LACMA – that features a similar form delineated in black and white on the surface of a square canvas. Now the artist re-engages with the language of the cross but heightens the perceptual experience by installing the work flush with the wall, embedding the cross within the physical environment in order to activate the negative space. The white wall appears to come forward to greet the work, negating the distinction between the two. The materials for Untitled (Double Cross) are pulled from works that were shown at the 1974 LACMA exhibition ‘L.A. 6/Summer '74’ in which Corse exhibited five paintings made of thin aluminium rectilinear sheets covered in acrylic squares that floated out from the wall.
In addition, the cross – beyond being widely identified as a form rich with meaning historically – is also a manifestation of the artist’s subconscious: the cross is a sketch repeated in Corse’s latent drawings, one she is instinctively drawn to. Untitled (Double Cross) also illustrates the progressive, cyclical nature of Corse’s work, showing how one work leads into another: be it a day, a year or many decades later.
A large-scale work, Untitled (2020), leads the viewer from one gallery space to another, acting as a bridge between two distinctive bodies of work. This painting features the same black acrylic squares as Untitled (Double Cross) but combined with Corse’s signature white microspheres. The microspheres are a prism-like material that Corse discovered in 1968 after a drive home from Malibu, observing the effect of the headlights on the white line dividing the highway. By refracting rather than reflecting light, this utilitarian material creates light itself, inviting the viewer to experience changes in the work as they move around it. Untitled (2020) also features the evident brushstroke of the artist, something Corse actively reintroduced into her work after being reminded, paradoxically through a re-engagement with the scientific process, of the layered subjectivity embedded in our perception: how perception creates reality, including our experience of light, a phenomena unique to every being. The brushstroke, a mark of subjectivity, is now maintained in Corse’s paintings to demonstrate this. A series of White Light paintings that similarly incorporate the refractive glass microspheres, and feature the visible brushstroke, are exhibited in the following rooms.
The outdoor courtyard of the gallery will house the largest work in the exhibition, Untitled (Modular Panel) (2020), that unites the concepts and materials seen in the indoor spaces. This work brings the White Light paintings back outdoors, where Corse was first inspired to create them. Untitled (2020) relates directly to a painting the artist made on the exterior of her Topanga studio in 2016 and represents the first time she will exhibit a large-scale outdoor painting outside of the United States and in a commercial setting.
The presentation will also feature a new light box, Untitled (Electric Light) (2020) in the basement of the gallery, providing a glimpse into the artist’s very early career. Corse began producing these works in the 1960s, first attached to the wall, like a painting, but later allowing them to float free without any seeming attachment utilising innovative Tesla coils. This particular work, made in human proportions, invites the viewer to have a new experience with this body of work and creates a link with Corse’s Inner Band series. The light boxes also illustrate the artist’s enduring practicality in reaching the desired effect of each work – even completing a course in quantum physics so as to construct the high frequency generators, and wirelessly power the light boxes, herself.