HOUSTON, TX.- Conceptual artist Leandro Erlich constructs visual paradoxes and optical illusions that force viewers to question their own perception of reality and acknowledge the infinite possibilities of their surroundings a staircase that misleads to go nowhere; an elevator that appears partially stuck below ground; a swimming pool that appears to reflect one group of onlookers above the waters surface and a different group below: everyday situations that Erlich renders confounding. Beginning in June, the
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, presents two of the artists most iconic installations in the exhibition Leandro Erlich: Seeing is not Believing (June 26-September 5, 2022). These immersive environments and a selection of additional works will span the career of this acclaimed Argentine artist, whose psychological subversion of the everyday seems to defy the basic laws of physics and challenge our own sense of balance, space and the absolute.
Leandro Erlich has been mining the uncanny in the everyday for nearly 30 years. His work has been presented worldwide, yet not as frequently in the U.S., commented Gary Tinterow, Director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. It is especially because Erlich began his artistic career here in Houston and at the MFAH, as a resident of the Core program of the Glassell School of Art, that I am so pleased this will be both a homecoming for him and a revelation for our audiences.
Over more than 25 years, Leandro Erlich has deeply considered the emotional, social and even socio-political dimensions of our everyday environments, said Mari Carmen Ramirez, Wortham Curator of Latin American Art. His interventions into ordinary spaces resonate perhaps even more so today, at a time when our collective sense of time and space has become fluid and uncertain.
Erlich (b. 1973) explores the perceptual bases of reality and our capacity to confront these fundamental foundations. The architecture of the everyday is a recurring theme in Erlichs art, aimed at creating a dialogue between what we believe and what we see, just as he seeks to close the distance between the museum or gallery space and daily experience. As he said in a 2014 interview, he considers space the stage of our lives.
My work is like opening a window to see the new world and other realities.
Erlichs inspiration has been drawn from the writing of Jorge Luis Borges, and the discomfiting films of directors such as Alfred Hitchcock, Roman Polanski, Luis Buñuel and David Lynch, all of whom, he has said, have used the everyday as a stage for creating a fictional world obtained through the psychological subversion of everyday spaces.
For this exhibition, the MFAH presents two large-scale, immersive installations -- Le cabinet du psy (The Psychoanalysts Office) (2005) and Batîment (2004), to anchor a selection of smaller-scale works. Spanning the artists career, with works from the MFAH collection and private Houston collections, the selections begin with his earliest architectural interventions, produced during 1997-99 and his residency as a Core Program Fellow at the Glassell School of Art of the MFAH, and culminate with his more recent explorations into the instability of the built environment:
In the site-specific environment that Erlich creates with his iconic Batiment (2004) he plays with reflections by juxtaposing a reproduction of a building façade with a monumental mirror. Lying on the gallery floor between the two elements, visitors can move, position and see themselves in a gravity-defying illusion, seemingly suspended across the facade of a four-story, 19th-century French house.
To participate in Le cabinet du psy (The Psychoanalysts Office) (2005), viewers enter one of two rooms, each separated from the other by a large glass panel. They then see their reflection projected within a psychoanalysts office. Even though they are unable to access that space, they experience the duality of being in two places at one time: on the outside peering in, and on the inside, peering out.
Elevator (1996) is a scaled-down version of an elevator car. Here, Erlich turns a familiar encounter inside out: the features usually found on the inside of an ordinary elevator--mirror, buttons, and handles--are presented on the exterior. Behind the grate, on the inside of the "elevator," mirrors create the startling sensation of an infinitely deep elevator shaft. Ehrlich invites the viewer to consider what is real and what is an illusion.
Neighbors (1996), presents a segment of a corridor wall, as if from an apartment building interior, with two doors, both with peepholes. Ordinarily the peephole allows the person behind the door to peer out to the person in front of the door. In this case, however, the viewer sees instead the corridor of an apartment building and a neighbors door a space that cannot possibly exist.
Projector Corridor (2007) is comprised of a trapezoidal box with images of apartment doors painted on the sides and front. As the viewer peers through the peephole in the front door, they see the expanse of a residential hallway thus giving the momentary illusion of being in two places at one time.
Night Flight (2015) juxtaposes two views through airplane windows a day view with clouds on the left; a night view with city lights on the right presenting day and night at once and conveying the bleary, disorienting perspectives induced by a red-eye flight.