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Matthew Ritchie
Line of Play (2009)
Powder coated aluminum, vinyl and acrylic
Approximately 30 feet 6 inches by 20 feet 5 inches
Located in Main Concourse, NW Entry
Made of powder-coated aluminum, vinyl, and acrylic paint,
Matthew Ritchie's Line of Play (2009) transforms the age-old
medium of drawing. The work becomes a metaphor for the
many ways people make sense of just about everything, from our
surroundings to life's purpose to whatever might lie beyond. In
Ritchie's hands, art is an ongoing experiment - an ever-expanding
inquiry we puzzle over as we discover new ideas, change our
minds about old ones, and come up with more questions.
It all starts with the marks coaches make when they diagram
plays. Ritchie transfers the X's and O's they draw on chalkboards
to a computer, where he turns them into swirling force fields
of animated energy. The London-born, New York-based artist
describes Line of Play as two figures passing something between
them. It does not take a great leap to see what he means, even
if it is impossible to identify those figures and that object. That
is the point. Ritchie's futuristic triptych does not depict things
we already know, so much as it gives us a glimpse of things we
have never seen.
Ritchie emerged as an artist in the 1990s, when the Information
Age entered into its digital phase and the Internet made more
information accessible to more people than ever before. His
works are all based on the possibilities presented by technology's
capacity to bring together advanced systems of inquiry. Ritchie
often collaborates with neurologists, physicists, philosophers,
historians, and game theorists, in order to push knowledge,
consciousness, and beliefs beyond their existing limits.
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