This is a work in a series of sculptures called Rites of Passage. Jetsun Milarepa was a great Tibetan poet saint who lived around 1000 A.D. Lijn read his teaching while living in retreat in Greece in the early 1960’s. His life and words were of great importance to her.
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In 1971, Liliane Lijn proposed Breathing Tower for a commission for the Hayward Gallery's roof in London. The pulse - the breath - would take the form of Thames water being raised by hydraulics to change the shape of the mutable, ziggurat sculpture. read more
The oscillating line of reflected light on each cylinder acts as a system of signals that describes spatial changes occurring on the surface of the cylinder. read more
Most of the Linear Light Columns were vertical, although the earliest large one had been horizontal. In Light Line to Infinity Lijn has narrowed down the copper cylinder to concentrate on the line of light. read more
The oscillating line of reflected light on each cylinder acts as a system of signals that describes spatial changes occurring on the surface of the cylinder. read more
Koancuts are prints which Lijn made during the same period as the conical sculptures Anti-Gravity Koan, Space Displace Koan, and Exit Matter Koan which were the first large sculptures in her ongoing Koan series. read more
Koan is a Japanese word for a paradoxical riddle given to young Buddhist monks as aids for meditation. Koans are a continuous theme in Lijn’s work. read more
Fascinated by the processes and images of industry and in particular the network of industry which creates and distributes electricity, the energy upon which our society is based, Lijn created this series of silkscreen prints. read more
"I though of the brain as an electro-chemical system, a kind of organic machine. I found that using these delicate symbols, code for control and use of the flow of electrical energy, opened up a whole imaginative field for me." read more