Moving pictures: the amazing paintings that float in mid-air

New York duo Floto+Warner join a long tradition of artists, stretching from Hokusai to Pollock and beyond, who have suspended artworks in mid-air as if by magic

Luridly chemical colours hang in the air in the vast wastelands of Nevada in an eye-catching set of pictures by the New York art duo Floto+Warner. To make these images of bright liquids arrested in space, Cassandra and Jeremy Floto threw up cocktails of colour until their camera caught just the splashy, fluid, stilled moments they wanted to record. Apparently, Photoshop is not involved.

These images echo the great modern tradition that pictures motion, energy and flux. "Energy and motion made visible memories arrested in space," as Jackson Pollock said of his paintings that he made by dripping, flicking and throwing paint on to canvases laid on the floor. Pollock's "action paintings" are the obvious source of Floto and Warner's hurled colours: their photographs are playful riffs on Pollock. And they bring out one of the most startling things about his art: the sense it is still in motion even when it has stopped; the feel of paint being liquid long after it has dried.

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Published on July 16, 2014 07:48
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