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by Lyn Godley |
In (f)light
Lyn Godley’s art nesting in light
The title of this exhibition, “in (f)light” focuses on the metaphorical dialogue between two major artistic components: Birds – digital prints overlaid with charcoal; and Light – LEDs and fiber optics.
In universal mythology birds have been regarded as the incarnation of the soul and the breath of the universe. One of the oldest known artworks, dating back 33,000 years, is barely 5 cm in size and represents a water bird, found in the cave of Hohlen Fels. Since the beginning of recorded time, the flight of birds has captured the attention of mankind. Perhaps because birds, like the weightlessness of thoughts, seem to fly despite the pull of gravity.
Birds have an essential feeling for home. Every year, from the opposite side of the world, they return to the same nest. Migrating birds know when it`s time to set off and to embark on the next journey. Their inner compass is run by the magnetic receptors in their eyes. They track their position by the sun and the stars. Their flight is based on their perception of light.
In Plato’s Republic, the sun is regarded as the gift of the god Helios who provided mankind with the ability to perceive things visually. And the philosopher Sloterdijk wrote, “light is the guarantee that “being” is recognizable”. In other words, it is only through light that anything is visible.
Light is a key component in Lyn Godley`s work. Her flock of birds, as well as their flight, is mapped in light. It indicates the creature’s ability to chart a course, to communicate and visualize an image of the world. Her representation of birds, starts with digital imagery created on computers, but attains a very subjective animality through the use of light and charcoal. There is a feeling of freedom, vibrancy and energy, but also the birds appear unruly, chaotic and aggressive even – in the manner of Hitchcock’s famous movie – a threat coming from heaven and befalling the earth.
The use of light changes the common sight, stages the “subject” and draws attention to the undiscovered. With her show “in (f)light” the artist also changes the environment where the work is shown. A windowless space and a former printer`s shop is changed into a place where art is experienced. Through her installation, the space sees new light. For the first time, art enters this room as a lively flight of birds, nesting in a new world, lending wings to our senses.
Plato writes: “The natural function of the wing is to soar upwards and carry that which is heavy up to the place where dwells the race of gods.”
Let`s soar with the Gods!
Linde Trottenberg, MultiArt International
Cologne, September 2011
In (f)light
Von der Einnistung der Kunst im Licht von Lyn Godley
Lyn Godley‘s Ausstellungstitel verweist in sprachlicher Verdichtung auf die zwei wesentlichen künstlerischen Merkmale ihrer Installation: Vögel – auf digitalen Ausdrucken mit Kohle übermalt – und Licht – in der Verwendung von Glasfasertechnik und LEDs.
Zu den ältesten bekannten Kunstwerken gehört die kaum 5 cm große Vogelfigur aus dem Hohlen Fels bei Schelklingen, Es stellt einen Wasservogel mit angelegten Flügeln dar, ca. 33000 Jahre alt. Der Flug der Vögel muss die Phantasie der Menschen von Anfang an erregt haben, als sie in den Himmel sahen. Vögel scheinen nicht denselben Gesetzen der Natur unterworfen zu sein wie wir. Der Schwerelosigkeit von Gedanken gleich, trotzen sie der Schwerkraft.
Vögel, in der Mythologie universal als die Inkarnation der Seele und des Weltatems gesehen, kehren Jahr für Jahr, manchmal von der entgegengesetzten Seite des Globus, zum gleichen Nest zurück. In gewissem Sinn haben sie ein Gefühl von Heimat. Zugvögel wissen, wann es Zeit ist aufzubrechen und die nächste Reise anzutreten. Ihr innerer Kompass ist die Folge von Magnetrezeptoren im Auge, mit deren Hilfe sie den Neigungswinkel des Erdmagnetfeldes wahrnehmen können. Sie orientieren sich zudem an der Sonne und dem Stand der Sterne. Ihre Fortbewegung basiert also auch wesentlich auf der Wahrnehmung durch Licht.
Licht ist eine weitere fundamentale Komponente in Lyn Godley‘s Arbeiten. In Platon‘s Sonnengleichnis wird Licht als die Gabe des Gottes Helios gesehen. Er verleiht den Menschen die Fähigkeit der Wahrnehmung. Licht gilt bei Sloterdijk als „Garant der Erkennbarkeit des Seienden“ als „Sonde der Weltdurchdringung“. Erst durch Licht werden die Dinge sichtbar.
Die Verwendung von Licht hat bei Lyn Godley`s Objekten eine vielfache Funktion: es verweist auf die Fähigkeit der Kreatur, sich zu orientieren, miteinander zu kommunizieren, sich ein Bild zu machen von der Welt. Vogelschwarm und Vogelzug bewegen sich in ihrer Orientierung nach den Gegebenheiten des Lichts. Godley‘s Darstellung der Vögel, aus der technischen Welt des Computers entnommen, bekommt durch den Einsatz von Licht und Kreide eine eigene subjektive Kreatürlichkeit. Sie erscheinen frei, lebendig, energiegeladen, aber auch unruhig, chaotisch und aggressiv, als eine – wie bei Hitchcock – vom Himmel in die irdische Welt hereinbrechende Bedrohung.
Bei Lyn Godley verändert der Einsatz von Licht den vertrauten Anblick, setzt das Sujet in Szene, lenkt die Aufmerksamkeit auf Unentdecktes.
Mit ihrer Ausstellung „in (f)light“ verändert die Künstlerin auch den Raum , eine ehemals fensterlose Druckerei, die jetzt erstmalig als Kunsthalle dient. Diese erscheint durch ihre Installation „in neuem Licht“. Zum ersten Mal hält hier die Kunst in Form eines lebhaften Vogelflugs Einzug, nistet sich ein und beflügelt unsere Sinne.
Platon sagt:„ Die Funktion von Flügeln ist, Schweres hoch zu tragen, in die oberen Regionen, in denen die Götter wohnen.“
Lasst uns mit den Göttern fliegen!
Linde Trottenberg, MultiArt International
Köln im September 2011
This new body of work has merged so much of my life; from my early training as a Fine Artist, through my 25 year fascination with lighting, to my love of nature and the abundant birdlife I have enjoyed since I was a young girl. Although I studied Fine Art while in college, shortly after graduating I got involved in designing. I spent the next 30 years working as a designer, adapting my creative impulse to functional objects. Of all of the design work I have done, it has been lighting that I have focused on for the last two decades. It was through my fascination with lighting that I found my way back to Fine Art, initially in the form of large-scale drawings of nature-based “lamp” forms lit with fiber optics.
The imagery has evolved, and it was in my garden that I found the inspiration for this latest body of work, early mornings filled with bird songs, the constant flutter of birds as they take flight or find a perch in search of food or play.
Birds have always held much meaning to me, as they have to countless cultures throughout time. Birds have often represented our spiritual aspirations. With their unique ability to fly, ancient cultures believed birds were the link between heaven and earth. Throughout the ages, birds have been interpreted as the messengers of gods, being a source of inspiration in helping humans understand the physical and spiritual implications of living life on earth. They have often been considered the symbol of the soul. Their ability to fly reflects the ability within us to rise to new awareness, bridging the earth and the heavens. Legends, folklore, and mythology are filled with winged creatures that have touched humanity.
Lighting also has held deep meaning for me. My grandfather, an inventor, held over 90 patents on headlamp design and invented the automotive blinker. My father also was involved in lighting, owning his own fluorescent lighting company until WWII broke out and he closed it down to enlist in the military. Lighting as well has bridged cultural myths and religion as a symbolic of the energy that connects us all. In my work it reads as the connection between a constellation among the birds far above, and the soul’s energy deep within; as an aura that connects us to something beyond, something in flight, something that gives hope. It represents a connection of extremes: heaven and earth, black and white, even the artistic mediums of digital printing and charcoal, the oldest medium known to man.
For me, this new work that is rooted in my past training, merged with my years of fascination with light as well as my love of nature has a different function than my years as a designer creating work specifically for a particular client or market. This work is like the singing of my soul, a dialogue from deep within blended with the world I have experienced around me.
Lyn Godley


