1stDibs is pleased to present “Frame Compositions,” an in-house curated exhibition of digital works by multimedia artist Richard Garet. For this solo exhibition, Garet debuts his latest NFT series, also called “Frame Compositions,” comprising 29 works that explore the relationship between color, light, surface and form on a digital plane. Adhering to strict parameters, he creates compositions by carefully selecting high-definition 1080×1080-pixel square frames one-by-one and then collating 60 per second using computer applications. Because each work contains 1800 frames squeezed into a 30 second time period, the eye can no longer identify individual frames, thus, creating moving images.
Visually, these moving images fall roughly into three types: noise, distortion and light emission. Each type prioritizes a different formal relationship. Light emission, for example, studies the multitude of ways color and light relate under specific conditions. Resembling one of Garet’s previous projects, “Perceptual: Sonic Landscape / Midnight Moment,” the frames generated in this type emit a strong underlight giving the illusion that vibrant fluorescent squares regress in towards the background and back out again. In contrast, the images associated with noise focuses on the formal elements of surface and light and navigate what Garet characterizes as “visual debris,” or unwanted visual information. Additionally, distortion types experiment with the compositional limitations of form and color. Together, these works demonstrate that the principles of physical art have the capacity to extend into the domain of digital art.
To create a frame composition, Garet employs the process of meticulously layering saturated colors and overlaying square frames until the work fits the parameters. At 60 fps, the image streams the frames in “a constant and non-repeating state of excited motion.” On the visual purpose behind the work’s parameters, the artist writes, “The perimeter balanced or conflicting across strict boundaries approaches a kind of incandescence through their saturation and combination. The moving image comprising frame compositions has the quality of an actual source of light, bridging the worlds of reflective and emanative luminous phenomena.”
As the frames move rapidly over time, they emanate a luminosity that magnetizes and pulls the viewer into the work. “Each piece,” the artist explains, “emerged from flash instants in a continuous stream of generative video imagery exploring the qualities and potentials of time modulation and light emission.” The computer generated nature of the frame compositions mirrors the manual craftsmanship that artists who create physical objects exert by hand.
Undeniably, the works in “Frame Compositions” show Garet’s knowledge of modern and contemporary masterpieces of the physical art world, and comparisons to iconic series, like the experiential light installations by James Turrell, Color Field oil paintings by Mark Rothko and neon light sculptures by Dan Flavin, are hard to escape. Although the artist shares a stylistic kinship with these blue-chip artists, he distinguishes his practice by expanding formal explorations of color, light and surface onto the digital canvas. Turrell, Rothko, and Flavin have created decades of work extensively about the art of making physical art. Garet, on the other hand, considers the pictorial significance of color, form, surface and light specifically within the domain of digital art.