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John Young

PARADOXICAL DIALOGUES

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THE DECONSTRUCTIVE TURN: MINIMALISM

In 1981 John Young produced a series of large works on paper Drawings in Ten Parts (1981). These consisted of ten very large (228 x 127cm) pencil drawings in which he drew a series of closely arrayed vertical lines from top to bottom of the paper, stopping the line only when the pencil lead broke. Young then drew a series of horizontal lines in the form of dashes which created the illusion of woven fabric. 

The drawings look like hand-woven fabric, which is some­what perplexing because in art historical terms they refer to the widespread use of the grid in twentieth century art as a sign of mechanism and rationalism. Young's drawing seems to question this mechanistic-rationalistic interpreta­tion of the grid, and because of this Young's drawing is closer to minimalism than it is to earlier uses of the grid. 

When it first appeared in the mid-sixties the minimalist aesthetic was mistakenly interpreted by many art critics in terms of the rational formalism which informed early twen­tieth century movements such as De Stijl; a movement which we now see as being the epitome of the modernist aesthetic. It took until the late seventies for critics to realise that minimalism involved a deconstructive dialogue bet­ween rational-formalist visual language and antirationalist philosophy.1 

The cornerstone of rational-formalist visual language was the grid, and De Stijl used the grid as a perfect symbol of the rational order which the Western philosophical tradi­tion would like to believe constitutes not only the structure of Mind but also a "hidden order of nature” which al­legedly underlies the diversity and accident of surface appearances. 

But the grid is not a perfect symbol... The rest of this article is available to subscribers of Eyeline

Stoppage #6 (Pressure), 1987. Acrylic on canvas, 213 x 122cm. Courtesy Bellas Gallery. ​​​​​​​

Stoppage #6 (Pressure), 1987. Acrylic on canvas, 213 x 122cm. Courtesy Bellas Gallery.

Installation view, Drawing in Ten Parts, 1981. Pencil on paper, 28 x 127cm. Collection of the Artist.

Installation view, Drawing in Ten Parts, 1981. Pencil on paper, 28 x 127cm. Collection of the Artist.