Collections Spring 2014 Volume 99 | Page 9

NEW ACQUISITION Tatara Fire: Rebirth in the Flames Henry Mandell, American, born 1957, Tatara Fire, 2014. Acrylic inkjet on canvas. Museum purchase with funds provided by the contemporaries in 2014. Will South, chief curator “Patterns have their own rationale. When patterns emerge from chaos one can know things automatically, just by looking. I am working clear my perception of all the biases about being in the world. Ours is a chaotic sensorial world and abstraction is my way to depict its essence.” —Henry Mandell July 2013, New York Henry Mandell’s wall-sized mural, Tatara Fire, is the first digital painting to enter the CMA collection. This extraordinary new acquisition was made possible by the Museum’s young professionals membership affiliate group, the Contemporaries. Tatara Fire is on view in the second-floor atrium. Visitors will ask, naturally enough, what is it? As the artist has said, he understands the world as sensual chaos, order balanced with disorder. The sweeping lines and shapes are extracts of text from stories and data that spark ideas. In Tatara Fire, words and data are gleaned from the internet, placed in a digital file made by the artist, and then layered with color and shaped by hand—they are part of the artist’s palette. The work is about information as image. The result of this highly individualized treatment of source material is that lines and colors combine into a rich visual metaphor about unleashing energy. The final artwork no longer refers to the literal flow of words, yet contains the vestige of their structure. As the artist puts it: “Meaning becomes tangled and repurposed into the visual language of abstract painting.” With Tatara Fire, Mandell became fascinated with the idea of transformation though heat. A tatara is a large, ancient Japanese kiln, or forge, built out of clay with an open top capable of smelting very pure steel from iron sand gathered from a volcanic site, mixed and melted with carbon charcoal. Beginning a thousand years ago and peaking around the 1400s, artisans who had no technical tools where able to transform these raw materials into a pure form of steel that rivals any produced today in beauty, strength, and purity. The Tatara Fire mural is composed from text about the process of building and using the tatara to make Samurai swords, as well as historical records of names and objects from many museums and cultural sites related to tatara production. A second story of transformation is the historic burning of Columbia 150 years ago. Mandell researched the geographical coordinates of sites that were destroyed, as well as those that were damaged but survived. Text and data from this transformative event in Columbia’s history were wedded to the story of the steel being made from fire—something strong resulting from something that was melted by fire. For a biography of the artist and to see more of his work, visit henrymandell.com. To learn more about the Contemporaries, visit columbiamuseum.org. columbiamuseum.org 7