Sunday, January 17, 2016

BLAISE LARMEE


Blaise Larmee
By James D Bowman 3

INTRODUCTION

Life meets us between what we meant and what we’ll mean. The practice of Blaise Larmee wavers between two poles: the harried preoccupations of a sociopoliticized movement towards plurality in [“alternative”] comics on the one hand, and the sensitive tonalities of poetic imagery on the other. Between a vanished past and hidden future, Larmee arrives.

CHILDREN & PRETEENS

 “An object is capable of creating the place in which it is shown.”

– Roni Horn

Larmee’s works tend to reconstitute their contexts to such a degree that their contexts seem to be generated by them. This has, I feel, to do with the objects of Larmee’s aesthetic and ideational interests. Children and preteens have persisted in Larmee’s work. They disclose many of his central themes, such as the desire to live in a vitalized world and the processes of cultural transformation. With children and preteens, Larmee dons varied masks, manifests as varied avatars, and inhabits varied façades, all of which imply both possibility and constraint. Children and preteens seem to be a comfortable subject for Larmee, but reveal the nuances of life’s unease. They signify a state of hesitance and tension. He seems (at times) to want to efface himself somewhat; to become semi-anonymous in order to escape the congestion of expectations pinning him into fixity. Blaise Larmee’s preteens embody an alternately harsh and ethereal border between otherness and selfhood, between the self and the world. Preteens tilt. Their social diagonality is blatant. Life has been consistently misrepresented as a movement—back and forth—from verticality to horizontality. The obvious diagonal nature of experience is hidden, spoken of in hushed tones of reticence, in spite of the fact that awake and aware cultural critics have recommended these modes of ideational and experiential diagonality since eras immemorial.

“ALTERNATIVE” COMICS

So-called bohemian and countercultural movements are too often marred by the most basic misjudgments (excessive and unprotected sex, adherence to rigid ideological stances, lack of playfulness) and “enjoy” the kind of hedonism that trades passionate, holistic pleasure for hollow kicks and entertainments. Epicureanism seems, in other words, prone to disintegrate from a rewarding investment of attention to pleasure into orgiastic, Dionysian emptiness. Final answers w/r/t the conundrum posed by the mercurial nature of Larmee and his aesthetic descendants might be ridiculous keys to search for, but w/r/t this enterprise I’m uncharacteristically optimistic because—in the breath-lit minutes since its inception—the movement in “comics” that Larmee helped to instigate is the re-emergence of a repressed necessity: in the neo-post-structural cartoonists’ works, a new world of immense inclusion and relentless depth reaches the alive-but-in-its-death-throes old world of death, division, and insignificance; holding it with murderous love, splitting it open, and, in lacerating it, unleashing its millennia-worth of entrails as a fresh frontier. Each “fascism”-battered brain faces this new place, which is (seems to me) in a relaxed seated position in the middle of absolute plurality’s headquarters: an old-dance-studio-like “church” of aesthetic rebirth. In this context, Larmee’s recent work demarcates a pivotal point in the semi-collective semi-subconscious of the U.S. where many hidden harmonies split wide a battle hymn of wounded interactions. Larmee’s preteens embody the harmony that rests moments ahead of comprehension, and the world of “comics” is made to reckon with a coded-but-ultimately-public power. In Larmee’s practice (which revolves as much around interviews, statements about art, talks, and so on) ideas are not allowed to calcify into sources of potential idol worship—and neither is his work. Instead, art pulls us toward itself, so that, while we’re aware of particular pieces, there is also always a kind of fuzzy background awareness of art as that which undergirds: something greater than the sum of its parts (because its parts are parts precisely because of the ways in which they relate to each other and to art as that set of innumerable acts in, with, and under life. It is not that works of art are hierophanies. This would imply that art is a “spiritual” “force” synonymous with life and/or a “cosmic” “source” of avatar-like manifestations of itself. Rather, art for Larmee seems to me to be the product (even the summation) of material forces as well as those material forces’ sources: Möbius strip teases well worth dedicating one’s life to.

A Beautiful Horizon

As Joseph Timko writes in “The Geometry of the Beautiful Horizon,” the “Fabric of the World stretched smoothly across its Frame plays evenly against the Air [and] were we somehow to make our Way past the Edge of all this and to look back from the Outside, all the myriad Coherences would dissolve and disappear from View; for this Path ushers us to the other Sense of Without.” Art, for Larmee, seems to be conceived of as an inter-/active horizon against which particular works of art arise and relate. Art works are art’s work, then, more than their artists’ works. The artist, as much as the artist’s utensils, acts as an apparatus of art itself, and should therefore be free of ego. The artist does what s/he must because it needs to be done for Art’s sake, not the sake of the artist’s “moral” “worth” or sense of self. The artist’s mastermindful naivety doesn’t preclude rumination. New truths reveal themselves and are absorbed into the arena of art—perfect in its eternal incompleteness. As with science, there is no (and can be no) creed, because there is no end in sight, and because the present and the future (and the insights and epiphanies that arise out of each) are never seen as the mere effects or results or workings-out of a more “sacred” past. In a strange way, cancel themselves not OUT but IN: into the non-all system of Art’s own evolution-via-revolution. Devotion is undertaken in actual time and material space, in actual and material inter-/actions. By refusing to let normativity (the lackluster shadow cast by the collective consciousness’s saturation in outmoded ideological systems) interfere with the ways in which one assists Art in the ongoing revelation of itself can the artist seize upon the delightful horizon: such seizures maintain a nearness to as well as a distance from Art.

An Aesthetic Representative

In his role as an aesthetic representative of the new world of immense inclusion and relentless depth, Larmee wears masks that make him more himself than ever: less a particular self than an ultimate, unrealized one. (A “Self” we all share, we all are, perhaps? Rendered in a quintessentially present—if “mass” mediated—way?) In this role, Larmee reshapes the negative space of shared legacies of pain into a place of awake sacred relations: a Promised Land-like realm of plurality-consciousness that contains massive laughter as well as vast sadness. In this sense, at least, he has intersected horizontally, from well within the conventions of (“alternative”) “comics”. I suspect that the phallus paintings of the “divine madman” Drukpa Kunley were (at least at first) as inappropriate in his era and area as Jonathan Meese’s swastikas have been in t/his, in ours. It was an enlightenment that allowed for openness to taboos in Kunley’s case. The unmoored, fear-haunted secularism that now runs the show sorely lacks that. Despite (and due to) his provocations, Drukpa Kunley was a teacher whose advice was heeded in his time and a sage esteemed to this day. We no longer heed the advice of those who are smart enough to break through the shit systems of oppression that lacerate the imagination and imprison the mind. Is it anything more than our collective sense of ennui and world-weariness that has allowed an artist like Jonathan Meese his success? If so, why hasn’t his contribution to contemporary thought been taken as seriously as it should be? Authentic devotion to Art is marked by a resolute orientation towards the materiality of our corporeal condition. While ideological conceptions (and thus presentations) of oneself are sentimental and pathetic—as people try to think themselves into or out of morality or greatness with the minds of others—devotional conceptions (and thus presentations) of oneself are mastermindful (and naïve in the best sense).

“Intermission” / “Related Content” – Hauntological Manifestations of Repressed Public Trauma in Personal Expressions of Civic Experiences: an Assessment of the Recent Past as a Kind of Gentle Percolation of Ghosts (in the Derridean Sense) in the Aesthetics of the Non-Rhetoricized Fashions of Jeopardized Essence

“The man who consciously pays no heed to fashion accepts its form just as much as the dandy does, only he embodies it in another category, the former in that of exaggeration, the latter in that of negation. Indeed, it occasionally happens that it becomes fashionable in whole bodies of a large class to depart altogether from the standards set by fashion.”

– Georg Simmel

“Minimalism has become the unofficial language of contemporary commemoration.”

– Erika Doss

If all the fashions of the semi-apocalyptic present moment were to be combined into some odd but bland aesthetic “item” (as denim was the pre-semi-apocalyptic item-of-items) and the location of immense phenomenological potential—as a parameter pounded into the material with the chisel of participation (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HG8tqEUTlvs), what would our item of items be? It may not be possible to know, but it is impossible for me even to guess, for the aesthetic blessing of this moment in cultural history—since the linearity of history has everything to do with the civic experience of a present “moment” or series of moments—is the passionate semi-embrace of the radical (albeit safe) “other” in forms that seem (at first) somewhat bizarre, but are, in fact, not inventive but merely innovative, not fresh or new but a trick in which old aesthetics and ideals are made into new-seeming but ultimately unhelpful assemblages of staleness. This passionate semi-embrace is incomplete because—and one can feel this if one’s antennae are healthy and honed—there is a deeper terror on the inside of the ostensibly “new” “tolerance”—by the masses—of the quirky, the weird, the bizarre, and the rebellious in fashion, music, art, and so on. It is not as radical an embrace as it could/should be, and has never been. If, say, massive images of fleas were to be plastered in eerie, photorealistic detail on t-shirts across these United States, this ennui-ridden latest phase in the maturation of history—this feeling of being at/in the “end” of history—would have its cluster of nameless mascots. Out culture’s interests are not new. Underlying statements about future fashions is the possibility of vast plurality and a pouring out of repressed “insanities”: headspaces that—compared to our more common neuroses, which hide and deny those inherent “insanities” behind “real” “life”—would shine with an unparalleled loveliness. The haunted fashions of this moment both highlight repressed public trauma and put it into perspective repressed public traumas’ impact: the odd, auratic nature of dark but numinous incidents, post-rhetoricization—perforations in the makeup of material realities. An understanding of presentation as a paramount horizon upon which sits the possibility of inclusive communion in the seismic impishness of heartaches and blisses immense and perspectives rooted in grief both belong and do not belong to the half-hidden signifiers who light the inside of what was impossible before it was strewn into the newness of a real space’s particularities. These horizons are representatives of an unknown “beyond”. In today’s modes of self-presentation, there can be heard very little in the way of meaningful innovation. We have borrowed overmuch from the past. Fashion—the most recognizable extension and expression of how we are now situated between aesthetic and ideological horizons (the “west/sunset” and “east/sunrise” of phenomenological possibility)—is made to contend with its seemingly irreconcilable roles. Some adopt “their” fashion as a kind of shorthand for authenticity, hoping to convey both truths and lies about themselves to shape (as best they can) how others read them, as texts. The more extreme the statement, the more controlled the reading, so that most of us opt for less extreme statements that are thus more open-ended. (Most of us do not rely on fashion in anything like an exclusive way communicatively, but tailor others’ perceptions of us via conversational and action-based methods as well, of course.)
Fashion also allows for acting, however, and not merely on some ghettoized stage (as an obvious performance) but in daily life. It can do as much—if not more—to hide those who wish to conceal themselves as to reveal those who wish to express their “authentic” public personalities. In the aesthetic realities of traumatized sites and symbols—in which some kind of persecution has been internalized—we witness, over and over, a present moment that, enduring abuse, performs a kind of self-emptying in which bits of histories (distressing and/or welcome) are invited in, and manifest as modes that not infrequently celebrate marginalized, repressed, and persecuted existential possibilities and positions: awed silence before scarred perfection. Over and over, we meet the open arms of a panenangelic personal experience and refuse, for the pettiest of reasons, such a boundless embrace. Because of this (and, of course, other reasons) loveliness tends to point, in the realm of nuanced and non-rhetoricized immediacy, not to itself, but to the more recognizable public traumas that a culture (as a personalized whole) undergoes. In so-called renaissance after so-called renaissance, humankind has tended to trade vertical for horizontal modes of motion w/r/t the ideals of production and the production of ideals, and thus the perception of realities—and possibilities. Passionate dances enter, permeate, and exit the mind, but the laceration of the possible (i.e. the human psyche as an arena, or an origin, of endless potential interactions between endless and able-to-be-realized potentials) is an immense laceration, in length and in depth. This incision stretches from horizon to horizon. The cut (v.) occurs in one traumatic moment and then the cut (n.) oozes traumas from the past into our minds. These traumas enter and permeate, as passions do, but must be kicked out.
Ideological phantoms, specters, etc. are more alive now than ever before. Now—between the past and the revolution that will be brought about by advents in neuroscience—is a time more haunted by ideological phantoms than ever before. The advents in neuroscience will alter our understanding of what it means to be human, and likely eliminate some, if not most, of the hauntological pathogens of pathos that infect the present with memories of the past, ideologies from the past, and ideas (all incomplete if not incorrect) about the future. It will be more marvelous and more extreme than most of us will be prepared for. How do we revitalize the present? For starters, by living in it. Many have perfected the art of presentness psychologically, and have touched lives. The effect has yet to reach beyond the realm of the psychological and (at most) interpersonal into the realm of the social and impersonally political in a major way. Politics is far too tied to all that is elsewhere in time, haunted by the ideologies and traumatic calamities of the past and haunted by the suspicion that the same kinds of traumatic calamities will happen in the future if not curbed by the same kinds of tired and outdated ideologies: literally a self-defeating system in which the same note is played o’er n’ o’er. Presentness is generally thought of (as I’ve thought of it thus far) in terms of time, but spatial concerns are no less important. It would seems we’re as situated in space as in time, but our spatial situation is actually just as incalculably nuanced, if not more nuanced. It has, I feel, to do with how connected we are, as parts, to the whole of life. A human with a canine sense of smell would be nowhere locked alone in a room with nothing smell. Most of us would prefer a less intense sense of smell that in a world of aromas to a perfect—but useless—olfactory sense in a context in which it has no use. This calls attention to how we are, for all intents and purposes, “one with” so much. Each bleeds into more bleeds into much bleeds back, funnel-like, into some and—once more—one. Not only are we connected to each other and “nature” in the pastoral, pre-Industrial Revolution sense, but to nature as that vast whole made up of toxic waste, nuclear weapons, plastic, disease, and technological innovation just as much as animals, vegetables, minerals, and other “natural” facets of nature. In a speech titled “Powers of the Hoard: Artistry and Agency in a World of Vibrant Matter”, Jane Bennett says, “In Mad Travelers: Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illness, Ian Hacking makes a persuasive argument that some forms of mental illness arise “only at certain times and places,” and are semantically located between a virtue celebrated in the culture and its accompanying vice. Hacking examines the strange epidemic of fugueurs (compulsive walkers) in 1887 in France and shows how it arose in the space between the culture’s celebration of traveling abroad and its pathologization of vagrancy. What this particular virtue-vice pair expressed was the thematization of physical mobility as an area of ethical and political concern. If the fugueur was the madman for his time and place, as hysteria has been called the prototypical psychopathology of Victorian England, then perhaps hoarding is the madness appropriate to a political economy devoted to over-consumption, planned obsolescence […] and vast mountains of disavowed waste.” Bennett asked, “What counts as the material of vital materialism? Is it only human labor and the socio-economic entities made by men using raw materials? Or is materiality more potent than that? How can political theory do a better job of recognizing the active participation of nonhuman forces in every event and every stabilization? Is there a form of theory that can acknowledge a certain ‘thing-power,’ that is, the irreducibility of objects to the human meanings or agendas they also embody?” and in her talk said the hoarders on the TV show HOARDERS recognized a taboo against animistic thinking. So if history exists in space as well as time (as it does) and if a certain amount of existential horror is the father of fashion (as it is) and if repressed public trauma bleeds out of us, Gethsemane-sweat-like, into private and (ultimately) public life (as it must) how much does humiliation (or the fear of it) factor into the trauma-haunted minimalism that percolates (a “ghost”) at the heart of contemporary mainstream fashion. If human bodies (and faces) are non-blank non-slates (as, of course, they are) the impact of this fact on fashion—and therefore self-expression in nonverbal and inactive ways; ways that rely on ostensibly “chosen” signifiers—is immense, and leads to a certain inevitable, market-driven dearth of expressive potentials. In painting, an artist can count on the blankness of her canvas. Fashion has no such reliable sameness as a starting point, and is, therefore, inevitably imbued with a certain amount of what might be called “compositional cynicism” from the get go; which could, I hereby hypothesize, have negative interpersonal (and even sociopolitical) effects. The lackluster state of contemporary fashion (and the culture of carelessness that has arisen around this famine of flamboyance) should garner more attention than it does.

2001

The screen becomes a luminous canvas that buzzes like a bumblebee; rain-bathed not infrequently in small gods’ tears, eroticized proximity feels itself to be a violence creative: explosive motions’ encounters with slick surfaces. This piece, passed to the public in the relay race of aestheticized ideation, pitches another visual hymn of post-industrial passion into astral orbit—violet bulbs of adolescence that bloom like karate wounds. As David Foster Wallace wrote: “the sad way the street smelled at twilight, when all of the houses became the same color and all of their porch lights came on like bulwarks against something without name. His eyes when he turned from the door didn’t scare me, but the feeling was somehow related to being scared.”

3 BOOKS / Conclusion

In 3 BOOKS, Larmee analyzes with dazzling scrupulosity the voluminous, inevitable melancholia of aesthetics-in-time. Filled with secret hopes and fears, full of the dance of vibrant matter, instilled with both the felicities of nuanced expression and the bombast of comics’ avant-garde, 3 BOOKS erupts as a set of auratic eruptions of psychic dissonance into the yet-to-be arbitrated context of the contemporary condition. If the work as a whole forms a fever dream, the divisions between each third marks a moment for us to weep ourselves awake. And if passion lattices the laughter that rises as loaves of cozy bread between dull dreams, snowcapped summits of rushed recitations rise like steeples in the breeze of Larmee’s incalculable influence.

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Luminous Blotches – Some Gallerists (Group Show @ The Duck) by James D Bowman 3

I'd like to liken Ramaya Tegegne’s contribution to a dream that I [might as well have] had, in which Maria Callas did guest vocals on an unreleased Wu-Tang Clan album. I would like to, but it wouldn’t (most likely) be quite right. Bjarne Melgaard’s hilarious work here seems a fever dreamy exercise in parental prayer, and is somewhat reminiscent of recently deceased memes. What heroic palpitations can we sense at the center of these artists’ dark hybridity? Have they twisted colorful chunks of the terrestrial into a semi-transcendent critique of aesthetic paramountcy, and thus avoided the trite death at the center of hackneyed ideologies’ colonization of a collective imagination already marred by an overdose of faux-jouissance? Probably not, to be honest—but it does the heart some good to hope so. Luminous blotches of semi-sub-ideational creation, the works in Some Gallerists manifest as a stunned array of graceful waitresses, no? A cherubic fool, I’ve let the show’s multifariousness arouse my awareness of overlooked actualities that undergird everyday sites of public rituality. One of Max Brand’s beautiful contributions (a boom boxy thing dressed in a plastic bag tank top) seems to me to concern itself with the Then in the midst of the Now, and with the Ins and Outs of the Odds and Ends of the impenetrable legacies aplenty.

Ramaya Tegegne

Max Brand

Bjarne Melgaard



Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Elad Lassry @ David Kordansky

Lassry, notes the press release, “dismantles and democratizes standard […] hierarchies of subject matter”. Part and parcel of this dismantling act is a series of skillful, systematic contextual dislocations, which are most obvious in the intoxicating constellation of wooden, sculptures at the heart of this exhibition: oblong pieces that don’t rely on semi-amorphousness in their resistance of classifiability, but resist it by means of a resistance of semi-amorphousness itself—and thus call into question, I think, how we locate authentic non-conformism in sculpture today. If semi-amorphousness has been so ever-present in contemporary nonrepresentational sculpture that it’s generated a realm of rote homogeneity (a “world” in which each nonrepresentational sculpture refers, as a rule, less to itself than to abstract-sculpture-as-a-whole and abstract-sculpture-as-a-history) how can a nonrepresentational sculpture refer to itself and to reality foremost and only secondarily (if at all) to an abstract sculpture context which is now become all but utterly wrung of its honey? I think these bottle tree pod-like pieces by Lassry are a step in a correct direction, as they seem to me to make their own context, and them (oddly enough) to maim even it, as unapologetic agents of change. The press release likens them to flash-drives: “like hard drives or flash drives [they] become tangible metaphors for the collection and storage of pixels, situating a disembodied process in a physical space negotiated by embodied viewers.” This seems to me an apt description of the heart of the entire show; a show in which disembodied digital processes are carefully poured into analog “containers” for the purposes of a rich and pleasurable assessment that can only arise in a context so dislocated. Prior to Lassry’s generation of this context, our access to the processes behind these processes was far more limited w/r/t interaction. When the processes behind such processes appear in Lassry’s show, however, a radical contextual dislocation takes place at the very core of a collective contemplation of the contemporary. Lassry’s works here restrict the usual intensity of the processes’ sensorial impact, dislodging it to the surrounding sides, such that there is made a “soil” from which the riches revealed here can surface. Some exhibitions reveal themselves to me like nests of unexpected gems; intimate spaces full of animistic spirits half-hatched from the eggs of material arrangement by means of which they’re manifest. Here, however, the ambit of each piece’s enchantment power is relatively small, I’d say, but they become, taken collectively, a veritable coral reef of allure, in which the reality of pictorial power and potential is paramount.



Flexibility, Intense Fragility, and Death in the Work of Félix González-Torres

It’s been almost two decades since the death of Félix González-Torres and his masterpieces of mutable minimalism have only become more impressive; still more radical than almost any oeuvre that has been developed since. His aesthetic godfather, Bertolt Brecht once said, “Because things are the way they are, things will not stay the way they are,” and González-Torres shows us the opposite-and-equal reality: because things will not stay the way they are, they are the way they are. His oeuvre is more his own and less his era’s, less his culture’s, than most for the simple reason that it doesn’t insist upon itself as monolithic “truth,” as the pioneering but limited work of, say, Donald Judd does. Because González-Torres’s works refuse to stay the way they are, and because their very nature entails incredible variability, they become what they are: witnesses to change, attesting to the ridiculousness of the concept of stasis itself. Static works, like Judd’s or Michelangelo’s “David,” for instance, can’t stay the way they were or are but are endlessly transformed in—and by—the sea of time. Flexibility was an acquaintance of Andre’s, an enemy (it seems to me) of the monolith-making Judd, and a close, close friend of González-Torres. In Idolizing Pictures: Idolatry, Iconoclasm and Jewish Art, Anthony Julius writes: “Destroying the idol just leaves an empty space, one which another idol may occupy. But preserving the idol, while denying it its bogus magic, strikes a telling blow against all false gods. To defeat your and bury him is one thing. To dress him in a jester’s costume and have him perform for you is another, more crushing, victory. One need not fear his return because he already has returned, in a guise which poses no threat at all.” Félix González-Torres’s work is impermanence incarnate—incarnate meaning “come to life” and “in material form,” and incarnate meaning “made human.”
A kind of consubstantiation takes place in the candy pieces whereby González-Torres’s soul mate’s dying (dead, now) body and González-Torres’s own dying (dead, too) body are present in the candies. It points to death: to his own, to his soul mate’s, to countless other AIDS-related deaths and, ultimately, death in general: the predator of peace that lurks in the fog of the future. If González-Torres bade us break bread or imbibe wine, he would, indeed, be crossing a line. However, he never sets himself up as a savior. In fact, what these pieces say is that he can’t save: himself, those he loves, his audience, or anyone. His pieces make plain their own mutability and impermanence, and are intended to remind us of our own. By dying, his pieces point to death, but are therefore never dead. They’re replenished, over and over, always living on the horizon that separates presence from absence, dying from birth, and pain from paradise

On "Whites" by Andra Ursuta by James D Bowman 3


By the time the eeriness of the sculptures sinks in, the breath-robbing awe is obstinate. Despite or because of this, I’ve been unable to contend with them. They seem to me to be a kind of Alterity incarnate; a precise kind of distanced apartness, which turns out to be clone-creepy, and not as unlike oneself as one would like. Here the proof, however, is: the beautiful horror of unfettered homogeneity. So much of me is irritated by these—what? Creatures? Characters? Snot-clogged Kleenex spruced up into unnamed deities and half cast aside like idols without idolaters? Or are all who stare, semi-spellbound, idolaters—or semi-idolaters, at least—of these? Contemporary art lovers have come to expect eruptions of obsession and “rebelliousness” [against?] to occur in the “white cube” context, but these pieces' whiteness, hammered home by the colorful chairs etc. on which they perch like so many barn owls, seems like a kind of cynical complicity, interested in nothing and rebellious only in their odd and mob-like over-identification with a cause that curbs enthusiastic, liberating revolt. The most interesting section of the press release reads: “The sculptures’ smooth casings and clean modernist geometries contrast with their gaping orifices and skeletal protrusions, suggesting cool modernism infected with a macabre bodily abjection. Instead of pedestals, the figures rest on old kitchen chairs, secondhand office furnishings, modernist design classics, and cast transparent resin bases, some embedded with fake vegetable slices. In seating her 'monuments,' Ursuta underscores their decrepit exhaustion. The clear hierarchy of sculpture and its base is undone (and who can forget her fellow Romanian Constantin Brancusi’s first nullification of the easy distinction between them?). If a commemorative monument is usually soaring and grandiose, implicating high-minded ideals and righteous values, Ursuta’s morose, dejected versions tell of the downfall of the Western modernist, idealist project. They remind us as well of the instability of the images we use to commemorate history—images that can be endlessly bent and adjusted to shifting political needs.” The show reminded me of two sentences from a poem by Eduardo C. Corral. First: “Too poor to afford lilies, / she walked down the aisle holding a glass of milk.” Second: “If I dream I’m cupping her face / with my hands, I wake up holding / the skull / of a wolf.”

Thursday, October 29, 2015

On Passage in the Air by Keiichi Tanaami by James D Bowman 3

The [wrestling / boxing] rings that appear in many of these pieces act as points of mysterious departure: mini-stages onto/into which viewers can project whatsoever they choose; and if Passage in the Air is a fever dream, its sculptures mark those moments in which we weep ourselves awake: spectacles drawing upon colors and designs of kimono fabrics Tanaami observed in his birth home, charms of Asian culture the artist rediscovered on his trip to China, movies imposed under the post-war occupation of the GHQ, and pine trees [“I recall reading in a book somewhere that ‘The trees are called “Matsu” (pine) because one must “Matsu” (wait) while god descends from the heavens along their branches.’ I had unwittingly been lured into a bizarre labyrinth and a world of oriental paradise by the pine trees that had stood outside my window.”], and restoring a intense sense of urgency to the exhibition.

Beyond the Genius of the Sea: SIRENS by Steffen Jørgensen, Robert Kjær Clausen, and Allan Nicolaisen @ Christian Andersen, Copenhagen by James D Bowman 3


In the introduction to his book Surrealism and the Novel, J.H. Matthews writes, “Authentic surrealism has always been fundamentally a matter of inspiration, reflected in a certain orientation of curiosity or aspiration, with the artists’ degree of success standing in close relationship to the suitability of form to meaning.” Allan Nicolaisen, Steffen Jørgensen and Robert Kjær Clausen have perfected this relationship in Sirens. Their mermaid corpse suffers the peculiar abjection of post-death objectification as a case of silenced (but vibrant) matter, so that (in this parable that critically echoes the narrative of the systemically problematic—no matter how clandestine—attitudes toward “otherness” brought about by the hauntological reverberations, in our postmodern era, of a blatantly brutalizing heritage) the oral oppressors of the sirens’ drowned-out subjectivities feel free to make—but nevertheless uneasy making—asinine statements about these beings which would (in a world less ennui-ridden, less riddled with disinterested disillusionment) provoke awed wonder instead of mild, ennui-ridden curiosity. These tragic special agents’ underlying awareness of the terrifying implications of the world’s plan-shattering spontaneity acts as a steady thread in an otherwise less-than-stable plot. According to the press release, “The characters in Sirens raise a series of questions about the nature of pretending, posing, and the ownership of their identities when these [identities] are constructed from a palette of media stereotypes” as a lifeguard takes to drinking, a special agent “resorts to rap music.” The remixed tropes that pervade the piece inscribe a stance of bountiful reevaluation onto the surface of the video as a vitalized arena of fractured narrative discursiveness so that trends are called into question rather than reinforced. All of us, as Derrida insists, are (mass-) mediated bricoleurs haunted by our varied and particular horizons; cerebral tinkerers who have to use whatever tools arise around us with whatever hands we’ve arbitrarily inherited from circumstances of culture, capacity, &c. Works like Sirens are crucial fireflies in the poisonous ointment of perceptual homogeneity.