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Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020
Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021
Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020
Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021
Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020
Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021
Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020
Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021
Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 - Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021 - Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020
Studio Olafur Eliasson, Berlin – 2021
Photo: Jens Ziehe
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 - Tanya Bonakdar Gallery Los Angeles – 2022 - Photo: Jeff White
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery Los Angeles – 2022
Photo: Jeff White
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 and Colour experiment no. 87, 2019 - Tanya Bonakdar Gallery Los Angeles – 2022 - Photo: Jeff White
Colour experiment no. 108, 2020 and Colour experiment no. 87, 2019
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery Los Angeles – 2022
Photo: Jeff White
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Colour experiment no. 108, 2020

In 2009, Olafur Eliasson began a series of circular paintings inspired by the idea of producing a new, comprehensive colour theory that would comprise all the visible colours of the prism. He began by working with a colour chemist to mix in paint an exact tone for each nanometre of light in the spectrum, which ranges in frequency from approximately 390 to 700 nanometres. Since those initial experiments, Eliasson has branched out to make a large number of painted works on circular canvases, known collectively as the colour experiments. A number of these works take their palettes from other sources, from historical paintings by J. M. W. Turner or Caspar David Friedrich, for example. In this case, the muted tones in the background were derived from the colours found in a photograph taken by the artist in Iceland in 2012. A formless multicolored explosion spreads out from the centre of the canvas, contrasting starkly with the smooth, even background.

Artwork details

Title

Colour experiment no. 108

Year

2020

Materials

Acrylic on canvas