Fort Grunt

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Stuff been seen

So I thought I'd post some stuff from last weekend in NY. No real need to post anything about the Rauschenberg show, I think the most salient thing was what we talked about before, the way you can see him lose interest in that way of working, the breakdown of the structure of the combines.

I did catch a good gallery show of Trenton Doyle Hancock, you should Netflix the second season of the art21 PBS did, it is lame in a PBS way but the part on him is pretty interesting. The work in this show was pretty good, a mix of comics linework and sensibility (including a comic he did about trying to become a vegan) but the paintings and drawings seem to work as objects while the writing the the wall helps to make it work as an environment...







The Whitney Biennial was alright, a lot of messy stuff, piles, holes in walls, etc, that might be interesting to sociology majors but not much to look at. Seems more interesting from a curator's point of view, or of criticizing the curators, like there was no real focus on the art or artists. Which is kind of funny, as the artists seem to get the most out of this...





I think of any of the work though, the video piece (image below) by Paul Chan was the most interesting- it was a video of a silhouette pointed on the floor, which reflected off the floor to the wall. The image on the floor was basically a couple of telephone poles, the wires connecting them moving like they're being blown around. Slowly, debris starts to rise from the bottom, eventually this starts to include cell phones, head phones, then bikes, cars, railroad cars. Eventually people begin to fall from the sky. The silhouettes are variously small and far away, or large and out of focus. Fairly simple and mesmerizing, and it rewarded the time it took to watch. It also worked well in the space, the people coming and going to watch worked well with it.

Updated music idea

So from what I was saying last night- maybe the focus for a first project could be taking all the double albums ever and compacting their collective belatedness into one concise statement. There's a list on Wikipedia, which has a lot of live albums and best offs that don't count, but it's kind of amazing to look at the list of double albums we could use, they are mostly by "good" bands but are generally terrible albums...

The Beatles "White Album"
The Rolling Stones "Exile on Main Street"
Bob Dylan "Blonde on Blonde"
The Clash "London Calling", "Sandinista!"
Husker Du "Zen Arcade"
Minutemen "Double Nickels on the Dime"
James Brown "The Payback"
Captain Beefheart "Trout Mask Replica"
Miles Davis "Bitches Brew"
Guns N Roses "Use Your Illusion I & II"
Outcast "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below"
Led Zeppelin "Physical Graffiti"
Pink Floyd "The Wall"
The Smashing Pumpkins "Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness"
The Who "Tommy" "Quadrophenia"
any Frank Zappa
Prince "Sign O the Times"

I think we could keep the list fairly short, but this one seems to cover a lot. I like the idea of the final project either being a mess of noise, or whatever that doesn't relate to the source material, just that it's short, to ride against the bloat, I guess. There could be something about how people can now save space on their shelves or computers by just having this as a distillation of the terribleness, sort of manifesto-like.


Wednesday, March 15, 2006

The Big Topic?

Thinking more about what we talked about last night- I think it could be a possible idea to push the "attempting to explain everything" idea in a non-ironic way, figuring out which things work and which don't- not that every work necessarily has to try to do it all, but each could be a part towards that kind of understanding. Like working with the monkeysphere idea, creating roles for the 150 people.

I think you had mentioned Goethe and some others as examples of failures at explaining everything- but I think there's something appealing to someone like Dante coming up with as system for trying to understand heaven and hell. Or Musil or Mann, not in a linear way, but breaking down pre-WWI Austrian and German society. I'm just thinking that there's some space here to both explore the art and science thing, the unease with living life thing, and other possible topics, while also leaving things like media, size, quantity, etc up for grabs too...

Monday, March 13, 2006

gee-whiz?

thought about the gee-whiz thing some more. I think Kentridge definitely fits that category, developing a sense of wonder in the viewer to hold their attention, and it seems to work on large and small scale. Ann Hamilton is another, for me at least, using the quantity thing to captivate the viewer- I didn't find many good images online, look up the book about her by Joan Simon.

Another version of this in the photographes of Thomas Demand- he does these large-scale photos of seemingly mundane things in a William Eggleston way, but as you look closely you can see that they are all constructed sets- in fact, the photos are the product, he never shows the constructions, as the lighting and how they are photographs are part of the illusion. They are also usually related to some places and time in particular, the first one below is from the Florida recount room, I don't know about the plane, but there is another of Hitler's bunker, another of the hallway in Jeffery Dahmer's apartment.





Another one I thought of was Tim Hawkinson. I've never actually seen his work, but saw it on the art21 things from pbs, I think that would explain it better than I could. Basically the bladder and the tubes play music throughout the whole space of the MassMOCA





The other one that comes to mind is James Turrell, the play with projected light vs. cuts in the wall, or the skyspaces, are very simple but definitely hold the viewer and alsohelp him deal almost directly with his subject, the perception of light. the crater project in arizona is supposed to be amazing too, though i don't think it's done yet.



Another one I was thinking of, on a different scale, is Vija Celmins, and a good example of virtuousity working in a good way, actually in a similar way to Agnes Martin. The images here are nice but when you see them up close, especially the large night star-scapes (oil paintings), the layers and density again work like some of the other examples here, to capture a sense of wonder...



Sunday, March 05, 2006

Getting on the bandwagon?

From today's New York Times:


The Collective Conscious

By HOLLAND COTTER

Contemporary art is a multibillion-dollar global industry. But why does such a big deal look so small, so slight, with its bland paintings, self-regarding videos, artful tchotchkes and shoppable M.F.A. artists-to-watch? There has to be another way to go, an alternative to a used-up "alternative." By far the most interesting option so far, one that began to be news a few years ago and has increased its visibility since, is the work of miniature subcultures known as collectives. Basically, art collectives do away with the one-artist-one-object model. They come in various sizes and formats: couples, quartets, teams, tribes and amorphous cyberspace communities. Sometimes a group of artists assumes the identity of a single person; sometimes, a single artist assumes the identity of many. Membership may be official, or casual, or even accidental: friends brainstorming in an apartment or strangers collaborating on the Internet from continents away. And they may or may not refer to their activities as art. Research, archiving and creative hacking are just as likely to produce objects, experiences, information that is politically didactic or end-in-itself beautiful, or both. One way or another, joint production among parties of equal standing — we're not talking about master artist and studio assistants here — scrambles existing aesthetic formulas. It may undermine the cult of the artist as media star, dislodge the supremacy of the precious object and unsettle the economic structures that make the art world a mirror image of the inequities of American culture at large. In short, it confuses how we think about art and assign value to it. This can only be good.

Consider, for example, the work of a collective with the name 0100101110101101.ORG. It consists of two young Spanish artists, Eva and Franco Mattes, who call their art "media actionism." Last year, they produced an elaborate international promotional campaign (posters, magazine, trailer, etc.) for a Hollywood-style war film titled "United We Stand," starring Penélope Cruz and Ewan McGregor.

The images in the poster and trailer, with barely disguised but heroicized references to the current war in Iraq, can be taken as typical examples of Hollywood-style propaganda-as-history. But the layers of deception go deeper. The film itself, echoing President Bush's triumphal "Top Gun" turn, exists only as advertising. It is a fiction built on fantasy. But thanks to an extensive poster campaign, the nonexistent film may lodge in our consciousness all the same.

For an earlier project, the collective created a benign computer virus as a work of art and made it available on a computer disc. For another, it hacked the Nike Corporation's Web site, inserting an "official" announcement of Nike plazas to be built in cities all over the world. If art can be defined as the purposeful shaping of images to embody and expand ideas, this collective's activities easily qualify.

If you want to locate the discrete work of art, however, you have a problem. You can own a piece of the "United We Stand" project by buying (or stealing) a poster, and you might get the virus whether you want it or not. What's really on offer, though, is conceptual substance: ideas about surveillance, ownership and the pervasiveness of the cultural propaganda otherwise known as popular entertainment.

Other collectives, several of which are represented in the 2006 Whitney Biennial, which opened last week, stretch conventional definitions of art and artist even further, into the realm of activist politics, scientific experimentation and historical reclamation.

Critical Art Ensemble, now well known because of the 2004 investigation of one of its members, Steve Kurtz, on suspicion of bioterrorist activities, combines the first two elements. Well aware of 1960's communalism, and directly influenced by collectives from the AIDS movement — Act Up, Gran Fury, Group Material — Critical Art Ensemble operates as a combination of scientific investigative unit, anticapitalist guerrilla cell, public service agency and multimedia art studio. It has conducted research into government and corporate control of biotechnology and biogenetics, and then presented its findings in publications, exhibitions and public performances that sometimes take the form of laboratory demonstrations. For a German performance with the artist Beatriz da Costa, the collective tested food brought by visitors for genetically modified organisms, whose import European Union officials claimed had been banned.

A related performance about genetic engineering and organic food was scheduled for the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art in the summer of 2004. But it was canceled after the police, answering a 911 call that Mr. Kurtz made from his home after his wife had a fatal heart attack, confiscated what they deemed were suspicious bacterial substances.

The substances were materials for one of the collective's art projects, which are always science projects. It would be easy to think that the government officials prosecuting Mr. Kurtz are simply too obtuse to see the "art" in Critical Art Ensemble's work. Yet it is just as likely that they see an art of potentially subversive information and don't like it.

Critical Art Ensemble is one of many art collectives operating on the principle that information is power and that it is most effectively made available through a combination of science and aesthetics. Another such group, the Center for Land Use Interpretation, combines history, environmental science and art to reveal the use, or misuse, of public land in the United States, with particular emphasis on what it sees as the excesses of the defense establishment.

The means that the collective uses are organizationally complex and specialized, beyond what any individual artist could manage. They include environmental research, book publication, exhibitions, an elaborate Web site and guided tours of military sites, chemical-weapon incinerators and abandoned shopping malls.

They are far less interested in producing art objects than in providing an experience of the world through a scientifically based aesthetic language of symmetries and disharmonies, tones and shades, concreteness and abstraction. Like the earth artist Robert Smithson, they locate the poetry of dissolution in geology. Unlike him, they don't physically shape the land itself, but shape the way you think about it. Through their art-as-science, or science-as-art, you make the environment, natural and constructed, your own without owning it.

If this collective model represents an alternative to the object-fixated market economy of art, other models are notable for turning conventional ideas of what an artist is inside out. For the singular artist-as-genius that is the foundation of the entire art industry, including sales exhibitions and criticism, they substitute multiplicity, anonymity, unpredictability.

Otabenga Jones & Associates, for example, is the identity assumed by four young African-American artists based in Houston (Dawolu Jabari Anderson, Jamal Cyrus, Kenya Evans and Robert A. Pruitt). Ota Benga was a real person, an African pygmy brought to the United States in 1904 and exhibited in a cage at the Bronx Zoo as a kind of living illustration for Darwin's "Origins of Species." Otabenga Jones is an invented character who is both a conceptual artist and a historian with an interest in critically reconstituting the connective tissue between African and African-American cultures.

In a recent solo show in Chelsea, his work revisited the Bronx in the 1970's and 80's, when hip-hop and graffiti, art forms with a communal base, were first becoming widely known. At DiverseWork in Houston in 2005 he and the four artists who sometimes use his name installed the equivalent of a sidewalk flea market selling bootleg DVD's and designer knockoffs.

The installation carries references to other artists: David Hammons, who once sold snowballs on the street in New York, and Georges Adeagbo from the Republic of Benin, who creates marketlike, altarlike outdoor installations. The piece also suggests that as commercial operations, there is no essential difference between the "art world" and the "real world," the gallery and the flea market, except for a protective divide. Outdoors, you could get arrested for selling bootleg goods; inside the art world's precincts, you're probably safe.

Otabenga Jones is four artists acting as one, with their four voices simultaneously blended and distinctive. The collective called the Atlas Group/Walid Raad, also devoted to recovering a social history, is one artist acting as many, specifically as the nonprofit research foundation called the Atlas Group. The subject in this case is the war-torn history of modern Lebanon, considered through installations of materials ranging from videotapes of prisoners being interrogated and tortured to photographic archives assembled by one Dr. Fakhouri.

But there is no Dr. Fakhouri. And although some of the Atlas Group material is based on real sources, much of it was produced by Mr. Raad, an artist based in Beirut and New York. Once you know what you're seeing, the work, usually presented in installation form, takes on an absurdist comic edge. At the same time it vividly evokes the almost preposterous horror of war itself, which Mr. Raad experiences both first hand and from a distance, and has evoked as semifictional collective memory.

Surely the most complicated of all collectively conceived art personalities in circulation at present is the polymath entity named Reena Spaulings, who is an artist, an art dealer and a character in a novel. The gallery that carries her name on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is by this point the best known and most conventional aspect of the Spaulings enterprise, though it didn't start out that way.

It was initially a storefront studio for the artist Emily Sundblad, who was in the United States from Sweden and was legally required to have a mailing address for residency. She and her partner, John Kelsey, used the space to create what amounted to an art project in the guise of a gallery, Reena Spaulings Fine Art, playing host to performances as well as exhibitions that lasted, in some cases, only a matter of hours.

Although artists have often become dealers, the Spaulings story flips the order around. It was only after the gallery became commercially viable that Spaulings had a solo show in a Chelsea gallery, a collective effort that incorporated elements from the Lower East Side space. At the same time, an autobiographical novel titled "Reena Spaulings" (Semiotexte, 2004) appeared.

To further confuse matters — and confusion of authorship, gender, media and other categorizing labels that the art market relies on to track product is the point of the Spaulings project — the book is the work of a second collective, Bernadette Corporation, with which Mr. Kelsey is affiliated. In the 1990's it created a fashion line and published a magazine (Made in U.S.A.); last year it established an underground film studio in Berlin. The novel itself was written by dozens of contributors, primarily via the Internet, and in the assembly-line mode once used by Hollywood film studios to produce scripts.

Indeed, like many collectives today, Bernadette Corporation exists largely in cyberspace, demonstrating that artists no longer require a place — a studio, a Chelsea — to make and show work, or a gallery system to promote it. In addition, just as collectivity de-emphasizes the singularity of the artist, digital media eliminate, or transform, the idea of the personal "touch" marketed as creative individuality. (The strenuous call for the revival of painting in the past few years might be seen as, in part, a reaction to the perceived encroachment of digital forms.)

Internet-savvy collectives like this one — and some collectives exist exclusively on the Web — take a holistic view of art as a long-term social process, rather than a short-term formal event. Just as important, they want to get their work out, free, to as wide an audience as possible, and the Internet lets them do so.

Unsurprisingly, both Bernadette Coorporation and Reena Spaulings were created by artists well versed in anticapitalist and anticorporate politics. Nor is it surprising that the gallery itself, after its free-form early days, became a going commercial concern, in the process having its edge blunted through its capitulation to the system it supposedly bucked. The gallery, in fact, has recently received critical reprimands around matters of self-promotion. So where will its founders take their project now?

Finally, it's important to acknowledge that making art collectively is by no means an automatic guarantee of radicalism, as the example of the much-touted Wrong Gallery proves.

A collaboration of three highly visible art world movers — Ali Subotnick, Massimiliano Gioni and the artist Maurizio Cattelan — it's a sort of free-floating curatorial project with no permanent address. For awhile it occupied a niche behind a locked glass door on a Chelsea street where it gave short-run shows to chic young artists. In conjunction with the biennial, it has organized a group show at the Whitney.

The Wrong Gallery's Whitney show is on a bad-boyish theme that Andy Warhol more or less finessed with his "Most Wanted Men" paintings 40 years ago. And this collective itself feels like tired old news. It's strictly an insider operation, limited to mildly tweaking the conventions and protocols of the art world while supporting business-as-usual. No wonder the industry thinks it's just the cleverest thing and gives it full approval. Like the art world in its present form, the Wrong Gallery is prominent and powerful, and trifling.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Quality issues

I'm not going to say i'm advocating this stance, but I was curious what you thought.

I was talking with this artist Paul in New York last weekend, and he was telling me about this artist he knows who is a really nice guy, but is an absolutely terrible artist. In his way at looking at things, he doesn't think he would want to spend time with this person, because it would put him in the awkward position of trying to help a hack or lying to him/blowing off the badness. But he thinks just being around someone who sucks will (1) affect his way of looking at things, softening him to mediocrity and (2) say something about his own ability to discern quality. The second thing is mostly a ny thing I would guess, so maybe not so relavant. Of course Paul is pretty aware that this makes him sound like a dick, but he's more concerned about the bigger issues here...

I think I tend to tie this in with the movie vs. book versions of High Fidelity. If I remember correctly, John Cusack's character in the both is taken to a couple's house by his girlfriend, they have a great time, and then learns they have terrible taste in everything. In the movie this is supposed to be a wakeup call and he opens his heart more, blah blah blah, but I remember the in the book, he takes a stand and declares that those things he loves (primarily music) are worth something, it's not just to look down on other people with. I mean, I remember gagging at that in the movie- of course you can have one dinner with people who suck if you're not a social retard, but how far could that friendship go? Maybe that's another issue Paul is just heading off- that if there's such a huge divide in terms of capability eventually you would drift away naturally.

This also plugs in a little bit to the idea of having a residency program and not just giving shit to friends or people you think could do something for you. The potential for political gain is perhaps as tempting as friendship.

Again, I'm not saying we need to be dicks to everyone, just curious what you think of that kind of stance.