Mel Bochner
Random Numbers #6
2000
Scroll
Mel Bochner
Random Numbers #6
2000
Physical Qualities
Oil on canvas, 24 x 18 in.
Credit Line
Purchased as the gift of Stiles Tuttle Colwill, Lutherville, Maryland, in Honor of Robert B. Kershaw on his 50th Birthday
Object Number
2001.437
The blurred brushstrokes of Mel Bochner’s Random Numbers paintings create a hazy atmosphere through which forms appear to float in a deep, fog-filled space. Surprisingly, the forms emerging from the haze are not associated with a misty landscape or seascape as one might expect. Instead they are numbers, shapes that signify a precise quantity. By placing matter-of-fact numbers in a painterly, poetic space, the artist creates a situation in which two systems of representation—numerical and visual—clash, resulting in an absurd combination of signs.
Bochner’s work suggests that if the expected context of a set of symbols is changed, confusion about their meaning may result. In other words, clear communication occurs when symbols— be they numbers or the conventions of oil painting—are used in a way that is commonly understood. Nevertheless the failure to achieve a specific recognizable meaning can also lead to a positive result—a heightened awareness of how systems of representation and communication operate.
The Baltimore Museum of Art, by purchase, 2001; Lawrence Markey Gallery, New York
Contemporary Wing Reinstallation
Inscribed: Verso: Random Numbers #6, o/c, 24' x 18', Bochner, 2001
