

The soil taken from London’s gardens probably brings with it life-forms of some kind – seeds, roots or larvae that will perhaps evolve. Or maybe not. To a public that increasingly expects events that they can interact with, the planters in Cruzvillegas’s Empty Lot at most offer the hope of an event that very probably won’t happen. Not, at least, during the brief spell of time in which the work will remain installed on the south side of the Thames.
Onto the silence of the great hall is superimposed the silence of a non-event space. Is this a statement of submission to the sacred space that Herzog & de Meuron wanted to create – the cloister of the Tate monastery? The answer is less immediate that what might appear and the double game of Empty Lot begins to become clearer when the other face of Janus is observed. The decision to anchor itself to the stairwell in the centre of the hall divides what is above from what is below. Above, a barren landscape, looked out upon as from a viewing platform, that can never be reached. A reaffirmation of the sublime of the great hall, the possibility of capturing the infinite that is consumed only with the eyes. Below the annihilation of the sublime, the affirmation of a space without quality – not a space to explore, as instead stated in the official brochure, almost as if to indicate the impossibility of conceiving – in that space – the passivity of the spectator.


“White can be erasure. It can be addition.” The words of Edmund de Waal, commenting on his exhibition currently showing at the Royal Academy of Arts, sums up a desire to reclaim the expressive capacity of silence.
White is a masterful display of a personal obsession. The work of de Waal is the vindication of the non-banality of the white, presented as a necessary condition to the way in which man physically and psychically relates to reality.


until 3 April 2016
Hyundai Commission 2015
Abraham Cruzvillegas: Empty Lot
Tate Modern, Turbine Hall, London
until 3 January 2016
White, a project by Edmund De Waal
Royal Academy of Arts, London