

TAKIS
(VASSILAKIS) was born in 1925 in Athens. Preferring,
as a matter of principle, to teach himself rather study in a institution,
he left Greece in 1954 and lived as a citizen
of the world, travelling through Europe and the USA. Despite this, he never
severed his links with the country of his birth. Starting in 1946,
from his earliest years as a sculptor, Takis was interested in natural phenomena:
stones moulded by time and river water, hte unexpected shapes taken by exploding
metals. He regarded them as sculpture. Some of his earliestvmanifestations
consisted of explosions carried out in open places. From 1954
to 1959 he lived in Paris, the Cote d' Azur
and London. In 1955 he exhibited sculptures
in the round at the Hanover Gallery, London, and the Galerie Furstenberg,
Paris. His first Signals date from 1954: they
were rods consisting of piano wires which created musical vibrations as
they stuck against each other in the wind. In fact they constituted the
first appearance in his work and in contemporary art history of a form of
musical expression in which sounds are called forth in a unprogrammed way,
owing to the action of natural forces. Takis is the inventor par excellence
of artistic expression based on the functional exlpoitation of the laws
of nature. His Signals went on to be exhibited at he Hannover Gallery in
1958, while in 1959
presented his first telemagnetic sculptures at the Galerie Iris Clert. These
consisted of very simple material items, a magnet and a needle: the latter
is attracted by the former, and remains poised in the air, held by a thread.
From this time onwards, telemagnetic sculpture formed the basis of Takis
aesthetic expression, and the antechamber to his musical sculpture. At the
same period another form of energy - light - began to fascinate the artist.
In Telelumieres he invited the public to watch the operation of an electromagnet:
mercury cathode lamps, formed in a variety of shapes, were connected to
electromagnets whose functioning caused variations in the intesity of the
light. Thus, in 1960 he presented his Flying
man in which, the human body is kept hanging in mid-air by magnet at the
Galerie Iris Clert. Three years later, a musical work of his, entitled Sound
of the Void and shown at the exhibition For the eye and the ear in New York,
presented for the first time the repetition concept of Takis music, which
constitutes an original and substantial part of his work. Takis' musical
sculptures are based on the simple concept of using magnetic waves caused
by electricity as a means to activate repeated musical sounds: the latter
are to be heard every time a needle strikes a string, when attracted by
a magnet. In 1965 these musical sculptures
went on show at the Alexandre Iolas Galleries in Paris and New York. In
the following year thousands of viewers heard the repetition concept of
Takis' music or the first time at Berkeley University. Since then his work
has been shown at other important centres, as well as in London and New
York: at the Howard Wise Gallery in New York in 1967,
1969 and 1970,
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1969,
the Centre national d' art contemporain in Paris in 1972,
the Hanover Kunstverein in 1974, and Documenta
6 in Kassel in 1977. Since then Takis has shown
his work at important one-artist exhibitions, including those at the Paris
Municipal Museum of modern Art (ARC 2, 1978)
and the Centre Pompidou (Paris 1981-82). He
won the Grand Prize at the Paris New Biennale in 1985.
In 1993 a retrospective of his work has been
held at the Jeu de Paume Gallery Paris, and at the Factory Athens Arts workshop
in 1995. Takis is the originator of this new
approach to the musicality of sound, which consists in laying bare the repetitious
structure of musical form and its functional derivation. Thus he rejects
the symbolism of represantation. As an artist he seeks a natural origin
for the construction of sound, and in particular that origin which is furthest
removed from the artist's arbitrary decision. For about forty years now,
it has been Takis's purpose to investigate language as a natural function,
conceiving function as a form of work. Furthermore, he has broken down the
frontiers between sculpture and music in a number of pieces which can only
be read by identifying their functionalism as structured units, with their
morphological, visual and acoustic aspects. From the 1980's
onwards he began to produce works on a large scale; his interest turned
to the creation of extensive installations and sculptures in both interior
and open spaces. He also became interested in the structuring of the urban
landscapes. Most of the works of this kind were produced in France. An illustrative
example would be the installation of a real forest of numerious Signs in
the Place de la Defence in Paris (1984-87),
the original and imaginative illumination of the Arc de Triophe at the same
period, the transformation of the aquaduct at Beauvais into a musical tower
with a network of vertical metallic strings, in 1992,
and his design for the layout of a subway station in Toulouse in 1993.
Always inventive and versatile, he did not confine his activities to sculpture
and space design. In 1973 he created the sets
for the ballet Eleusis at the Netherlands National Festival. He collaborated
with the director Costa Gavras on the soundtrack of the film Section Speciale
and designed the sets for Michalis Kakoyiannis' production of Electra in
1983. In 1988
in Athens he exhibited a series of designs for jewelry. Takis' non-morphological
inquiries have continued through succesive rejections of represantationalism;
his method and the acoustic sensations which it calls forth retain their
austerity. These are the features which place his invention among the most
important achievements of contemporary, post-World War II art. His work
stands forth, with maximum clarity, as a simple piece of information, devoid
of all reference to external facts. No other concept is put forward, except
for the one which is contained in the physical structure of the language
of music, which is seen to be none other that the logic of the senses in
all its extreme austerity.