Red, Green and Yellow
with
Flat Time House, London

27 April–28 May 2022
Roberts Institute of Art

Red, Green and Yellow is the second in an ambitious trilogy of exhibitions produced in a collaboration between Flat Time House (FTHo) and the Roberts Institute of Art (RIA).

Each exhibition explores a different facet of the complex network of ideas and relationships surrounding John Latham’s work in dialogue with important works from the David and Indrė Roberts Collection.

Part II of the trilogy builds from Latham’s vivid spray-painted work Red, Green and Yellow (1967) which is presented alongside minimal and conceptual works by Liliane Lijn, Tim Head, Bob Law and Wolfgang Tillmans. These works all experiment with light, space and duration and resonate with Latham’s belief in reflective and intuitive modes of working.

A new work has been commissioned in response to the exhibition by Berlin-based artist Julius Heinemann who has devised a new installation specially conceived for the space.

Open Thursday–Saturday, 12–6pm. Flat Time House is located in Peckham, South East London.

Roberts Institute of Art

When John Latham used spray-paint as he did in Red, Green and Yellow, he was referring to the time based nature of all things. His first spray work from 1954 was a mural for a domestic dwelling, using the spray gun in an attempt to capture the essence of time through an almost instantaneous painterly act.

Julius Heinemann’s subtle yet immersive installations, often produced with spray paint, explore layers of perception. Using the exhibition space as material – its dimension, structure and use as well as the change of light and shadow – the work reveals itself slowly, becoming all encompassing once discovered. He considers his mural interventions as echoes of events in time, recording the different layers and shifting experience of our surroundings.

Roberts Institute of Art

Julius Heinemann The Shift (Flat Time House, London), 2022. Site-specific installation throughout space: wall paint, spray paint, graphite, crayon, pigment, dust, existing spray-paint murals by John Latham, displaced glass door, found paper note with blu tack, cut-out of pre-existing carpet, works by Tim Head, John Latham, Bob Law, Liliane Lijn and Wolfgang Tillmans.

Courtesy the artist Photo: Melanie Issaka/Plastiques

Tim Head’s artwork deals with the instability and uncertainty of images and perception. His early conceptual photographs, made using hand mirrors, play on mirror-image illusions to create paradoxes and question how we view reality.

Bob Law’s watercolours can appear like mirrors unless inspected at very close quarters. Due to the glazing on their surface, the viewer is forced to stand close to the work and to focus intently, treating the work as a contemplative object.

Wolfgang Tillmans’ abstract ‘Silver’ series are photographs created without a camera. The imagery is created by traces of dust from the surface of the photosensitive paper reacting to light and chemical processes.

Liliane Lijn’s Cosmic Flares III (1966) is a kinetic sculpture within which spotlights illuminate the surface at changing angles. For Lijn this play of light is suggestive of elemental forces, performing a visual investigation into the laws of physics.

For each exhibition we have invited a writer to produce a newly commissioned exhibition text. For Red, Green and Yellow we have invited Karenjit Sandu to respond to the works in the exhibition and Heinemann’s commission.

The accompanying publication produced by FTHo and RIA with contextual and newly commissioned texts, and exhibition documentation will be launched in July 2022.

The third and final exhibition, Gone Fishing (16 June–17 July), features work by John Latham, Boyle Family and Marlie Mul with a new audio commission by London-based artist Damien Roach under the umbrella of his cross-media project, patten. Latham and Boyle Family were pioneers in understanding sculpture as conceptual art and central participants and in the cross-pollination of popular culture and the avant-garde.

Supported by Arts Council England, Henry Moore Foundation and The John Latham Foundation.

Roberts Institute of Art

Flat Time House and the Roberts Institute of Art

This new collaboration between Flat Time House (FTHo) and the Roberts Institute of Art (RIA) takes as a starting point prominent John Latham works from the David and Indrė Roberts Collection. The partnership, presented at FTHo, explores ideas in Latham’s work through performance-based commissions and a selection of key works from the collection.

2021 was the centenary year of John Latham’s birth, and this three-part presentation has developed from a conversation between RIA and FTHo around finding new perspectives on Latham’s work through a dialogue between the David and Indrė Roberts Collection and the John Latham archive.

Flat Time House

Flat Time House (FTHo) was the studio home of John Latham (1921–2006), recognised as one of the most significant and influential British post-war artists. In 2003, Latham declared the house a living sculpture, naming it FTHo after his theory of time, ‘Flat Time’. Until his death, Latham opened his door to anyone interested in thinking about art. It is in this spirit that

Flat Time House opened in 2008 as a gallery with a programme of exhibitions and events exploring the artist's practice, his theoretical ideas and their continued relevance. It also provides a centre for alternative learning, which includes the John Latham archive, and an artist's residency space.

Julius Heinemann

Julius Heinemann investigates the physical, neurological and cultural structures upon which the perception of the world is traditionally based. The relationship between how the eye sees and how the body moves and behaves exposes the issue of subjective individual perception, the construction of reality, and interactions with others (subjects and objects).

Based on the study of time and space, and through the experience of colour, light, shape or line, Heinemann constantly explores how to create new abstract tools to understand perception in its flow of now-ness. The artist structures these elements like vocabulary and uses it in his paintings, drawings, installations, books and every other type of media he experiments with. This process serves as a starting point for new ways of understanding the human condition – a social, subjective, individual reality.

Karenjit Sandu

Sandhu is a poet, artist and writer completing her PhD in contemporary poetry and artist's books at Royal Holloway, University of London. Her debut poetry collection young girls! (2021) is available via the87Press.