Opposites of white by Roni Horn - 2006-2007 Kröller-Müller Museum Opposites of white by Roni Horn - 2006-2007 Kröller-Müller Museum

Opposites of white

Solid cast black and colourless glass •
  • Roni Horn - September 25, 1955 Roni Horn 2006-2007

These two objects by American artist Roni Horn were made by gradually pouring liquid glass into a mould for twenty-four hours and slowly allowing them to cool over a period of four months. The rough sides of the objects show the texture of the moulds. The tops are smooth and shiny, because here the glass has only been in contact with the air. Depending on the viewpoint, they sometimes appear as a razor-sharp surface, or conversely as an endless depth.

In this work, Roni Horn plays with the ambiguous properties of glass. It is melted and then solidified again into an apparently permanent state, but it is essentially a liquid. With this game, Horn causes the observer to become confused: it is impossible to determine the material with the naked eye and whether the inside of the sculpture is solid or liquid.

Opposites of White forms a pair. There is no hierarchy between the parts. The two elements, one black, the other white, have more in common than that they differ. In Horn’s view these objects are doppelgangers, opposites that both demonstrate the absence of color, though white (light) actually contains all the colors.

We present today's sculpture thanks to Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo. :)

P.S. Are you curious to try philosophizing with art? Read here how they do it at the Kröller-Müller Museum.