LUCIE YOUNG ON JAMES TURRELL


The Sky Box
By LUCIE YOUNG

Published: March 21, 2004 New York Times

James Turrell is known for making art out of light and thin air, challenging our notion of how we see. The artist says that his work is ”like trying to make the emperor’s clothes visible.” Turrell calls his
latest work — a 350-square-foot concrete ”skyspace” — a garden folly. It hangs 200 feet above Benedict Canyon in Los Angeles, cost more than a million dollars and took 13 years to complete because of its precarious site. It even outlived the renowned modernist architect John Lautner, whose
office got the commission, and was completed by Lautner’s project architect, Duncan Nicholson.

From the outside, this folly looks like a cross between a bunker and a concrete brioche. Inside, it is like an isolation tank or a private chapel, filled with expensive nothingness: curved walls, a floating floor, a rectangular opening for a window and another, much larger one in the roof. Turrell likens the spare interior to Plato’s cave, in which ”we

realize that we perceive the outside reality incompletely. We think we areseeing the whole, but in fact we are only seeing part. We think we exist
independently of nature, but we are very interrelated. We even influence
the colors that we see.”

So does Turrell. Like the Wizard of Oz, he pulls the strings to
transform what we see. More than 5,000 computer-programmed L.E.D. and
incandescent lights, concealed beneath the floor, wash the walls with
a symphony of colors — which in turn transform the sky outside from blue
to red to molasses black. At times it feels as if the whole room is pulsating
with energy.
”The colors work on the senses like abstract music,”
Turrell said. ”It is profoundly emotional work.”

Often the reaction it elicits is awe. ”Everyone’s mouth falls open
when they see it,” said James Goldstein, an entrepreneur, who commissioned
the skyspace. Twice a day he navigates the 230 or so steps down a near-vertical
hillside from his house to visit his folly, which is equipped with a wet
bar and a sound system — two distinctly un-Turrellian additions. The
artist would prefer that his patron listen to the sounds of the planets,
but he doesn’t dictate how the space is to be used. Turrell’s own dream
(apart from completing the Roden Crater, the celestial observatory that he
has been building in a sleeping Arizona volcano for the last 30-plus years)
is to build a sky-viewing house where he can live, eat, bathe and sleep
year-round. ”Light is strangely fragile,” he said. ”It needs to have
a home where it is cared for.”

 

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About Jay Babcock

I am an independent writer and editor based in Tucson, Arizona. I publish LANDLINE at jaybabcock.substack.com Previously: I co-founded and edited Arthur Magazine (2002-2008, 2012-13) and curated the three Arthur music festival events (Arthurfest, ArthurBall, and Arthur Nights) (2005-6). Prior to that I was a district office staffer for Congressman Henry A. Waxman, a DJ at Silver Lake pirate radio station KBLT, a copy editor at Larry Flynt Publications, an editor at Mean magazine, and a freelance journalist contributing work to LAWeekly, Mojo, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Vibe, Rap Pages, Grand Royal and many other print and online outlets. An extended piece I wrote on Fela Kuti was selected for the Da Capo Best Music Writing 2000 anthology. In 2006, I was somehow listed in the Music section of Los Angeles Magazine's annual "Power" issue. In 2007-8, I produced a blog called "Nature Trumps," about the L.A. River. From 2010 to 2021, I lived in rural wilderness in Joshua Tree, Ca.