| James
Turrell was born May 6, 1943, in Los Angeles.
He graduated from Pasadena High School in 1961
and studied experimental psychology at Pomona
College in Claremont, California, receiving a
B.A. there in 1965. Having become interested in
art, he enrolled in the graduate program at the
University of California at Irvine. He created
his first light piece, Afrum-Proto, the next year,
in which light projected into the corner of a
room seemed to form a three-dimensional, illuminated
floating cube that resolved itself into flat planes
of light only upon close inspection. Leaving school,
Turrell took a studio in the former Mendota Hotel
in Ocean Park, California, and began to make more
projection pieces in corners and on flat walls.
Turrell was given his first solo
show at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1967. The following
year, he began making constructions in which light
shining out from behind one or more sides of a
partition wall dissolved edges and changed the
viewer’s perception of space in a room.
He participated in the Los Angeles County Museum’s
Art and Technology Program, investigating perceptual
phenomena with the artist Robert Irwin and psychologist
Edward Wortz. In 1969, Turrell made sky drawings
with Sam Francis, using colored skywriting smoke
and cloud-seeding materials. The Mendota Stoppages,
from this time, were orchestrated sequences of
light projected inside Turrell’s darkened
studio; the light, from natural and artificial
sources outside, was admitted by opening and closing
various apertures the artist had placed in the
studio walls.
Turrell received his M.A. in art
from Claremont Graduate School in 1973. The next
year, he began work on his first large Skyspace,
an aperture cut into the roof of a building that
causes the visible plane of the sky to appear
flat at the level of the opening. Also in 1974,
Turrell located Roden Crater, in northern Arizona,
where he has since worked to refine the site into
a monumental observatory for perceiving extraordinary
qualities of natural light and celestial events.
A solo show of Turrell’s work was held in
1976 at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. That
same year, Turrell created his first Space Division
piece, in which an opening onto a space filled
with ambient light is seen first as a flat surface
and then as a window onto a fog-filled room of
uncertain dimensions. Retrospectives of Turrell’s
work were held in 1980 at the Whitney Museum of
American Art, New York, and in 1985 at the Museum
of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. In the 1980s,
Turrell created dark pieces in which light is
reduced to barely perceptible levels. The artist
lives in Flagstaff, Arizona, and Inishkeame, Ireland.
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