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New
York, New Works at the Currier
published
by: HippoPress.com
New Hampshire's alternative
November 12, 2002
Curator Nina Felshin finds quality in art "where content and form
merge in a graceful way." As guest curator of "New York, New Work,
Now!" at the Currier Museum of Art, Felshin's interpretation of
quality is evident at every turn. An overall sense of aesthetic
value paired with social concern ties together the widely divergent
styles and mediums representing more than 25 artists, many of whom
openly acknowledge their debt to the history of 20th century art.
Felshin
has previously worked with a number of artists in the show, and
a few are under-represented in the big-name galleries, but almost
all are influential, well-recognized, and culturally relevant in
New York and among international art audiences. The themes treated
in the works span from issues of widespread social concern, such
as racial discrimination in popular culture and the criminal justice
system, to the societal causes of international warfare. Other themes
look more closely at art history, such as traditional understandings
of movements like abstract expressionism and minimalism, and the
role of women in the arts.
The
opportunity to pull together such an ambitious exhibition, one that
claims to represent the full spectrum of artistic production happening
now in what can reasonably be called the international capital of
modern art, thrilled Felshin: "In New York I could never have this
opportunity to do a survey of New York art. In New York, everyone
has already seen these artists." That's what makes Manchester the
perfect place to make a statement about art happening now in New
York, she said.
In
New Hampshire, "contemporary" does not exclusively refer to the
avant garde, and we see less avant-garde art in our galleries. Many
local artists prefer to work with strictly traditional painting,
photography and sculpture, and seek a more classical training than
most art schools offer. In part this may be due to our strong respect
for craft, but we are also culturally less metropolitan, less diverse,
and less concerned with "the newest thing" than New Yorkers.
Nonetheless,
contemporary art both in New Hampshire and New York also references
a long tradition that dates back to the French artist Marcel Duchamp
putting a urinal on display as a work of art at the Armory Show
in New York in 1913, and other daring acts of artistic intent throughout
the previous century.
While
you may disagree with Duchamp's approach, this show is an opportunity
for New Hampshire residents to get a close-up look at "the newest
thing" affecting the history of art on an international scale and
learn some deeper lessons about art and our society at the same
time. Lorna Simpson, Dread Scott, Glen Ligon, Renée Cox, and Kara
Walker are four widely exhibited African American artists who are
known for their forthright exposure of racial issues. Their works
vary in approach and medium from Dread Scott's intimate documentary
photography and audio recordings of prison inmates to Kara Walker's
"through the looking glass" style illustrations and false-artifacts
of the antebellum south.
Renèe
Cox's large-scale self-portrait powerfully asserts the nude African
American female into the canon. Her large-scale photo critiques
the late 19th-century French painting by Eduard Manet, "Olympia."
Manet's painting is emblematic of what art historians call "the
male gaze," in which female nudes passively offer their sexuality
for the consumption of the viewer (a small reproduction of the Manet
painting is on display in the gallery for comparison). In counterpoint
to "Olympia," a youthful white nude, Cox appears confident in her
role as the female artist, not gazing at the viewer as if drugged,
but instead possessive of her surroundings.
The
subjective experience of history, art history in particular, compels
several of the artists in the show to express the contradictions
of daily experience. Arnold Mesches' sweeping landscape/history
painting, "Anomie 1992: Landscape Painting," depicts the signs of
a society with a grim future, as he envisioned it at the close of
the Gulf War. On the reverse of the same wall, three of his collages
serve as testament to his witness of World War II and the social
ills that contributed to its development. Mesches is self-taught,
and currently enjoying the late-in-life success of a big show at
New York's contemporary art gallery PS1, in which he exploits his
800-page F.B.I. file recently obtained through the Freedom of Information
Act. Currier Museum curator Andrew Spahr sees the tendency to question
history as part of a larger ongoing discussion in academia. The
notion of history as always biased toward one perspective or another
is at the root of post-modernism. In this light, self-representation
then becomes the only legitimate history, the only version that
speaks truthfully.
Perhaps this questioning explains the willingness of so many young
artists to make art about art, endlessly fascinated by their own
interpretations of historical precedent. Dan Walsh's abstract paintings
and Elana Herzog's "Untitled #1" invite you to stay for a while
and enjoy the guilty pleasure of color and pattern, to witness the
brush strokes and staple marks that prove that the hand of an artist
created this object. These works delve into traditions of abstract
painting and sculpture that began in New York in the 1950s and 1960s
and remain strong half a century later. Even more bold are the small
scale series called "Bootlegs," copies of works by the latest big-name
artists, made in duplicate, by Eric Doeringer who sells them on
the sidewalks outside major art galleries in the Chelsea area of
New York City (an area abuzz with art). He thinks of them as a record
of "who's hot" now in New York. They make up a mini-exhibit within
the exhibit, questioning the relevance of originality and authorship
in contemporary art. And yes, a few of the copies are icons of works
by other artists in the show!
In
the vein of self-representation, much like Dread Scott's documentary
photographs and audio interviews of inmates, Polish-born artist
Krzysztof Wodiczko manipulates the latest technology in video and
video projections to allow individuals to publicly relate their
stories. His photographs of his 1999 projection performance "The
Hiroshima Projection, A-Bomb Dome, Hiroshima City," convey the quiet
stillness of a pair of elderly hands folded neatly over the surface
of a reflecting pool. The projection, in front of the last remaining
structure still standing after the explosion of the atomic bomb
in Hiroshima, took place during a ceremony commemorating the anniversary
of the attack. Other works by Wodiczko allow victims to publicly
grieve on an architectural scale, and manipulate technology to unite
the private and the public experience in one moment in time.
Wodiczko's
use of the photograph to present his performed works to a broad
audience owes a debt to the efforts of the conceptual artists and
curators who, in the 1970s, strove to make careers out of fragile,
momentary works of art. Many of these works are performed and need
to be documented in order to produce a product to sell (artists
need to earn a living). Documentation and supporting materials such
as drawings also provide a means to display their works without
laboriously recreating them every time an exhibition opportunity
arises. In turn, this kind of documentation of performance art inspired
new approaches to other mediums, particularly photography.
Lorie
Novak and Ann Hamilton, for example, use site-specific installations
to create their photographs. Drawing from both the careful staging
of commercial studio photography and the more expressive example
of outdoor performances by Ana Mendieta in the 1980s, the performance
becomes a means to achieve a more meaningful photograph. Hamilton's
"Reflection" series bejewels one wall of the gallery with the subtle
light changes as seen through a green wall of glass. Hamilton installed
the wall at the 1999 Venice Biennale, photographing herself through
its blurred surface every five minutes from noon to 1 p.m. Novak
layers projected images onto surfaces and other photographs to create
poetic montages of family snapshots and old European travel albums.
New
York City has become an emblem of survival and patriotism since
last September. The diverse works in this show-including also Tony
Feher's thoughtful tribute to Sept. 11, Janet Biggs' video installation
about aging and medication, several humorous works by Beverly Sims,
Barbara Pollack, and Nancy Davidson, and a few examples of Internet
art-are a tribute to the vitality and complexity of New York City,
a wonderfully distorted microcosm of our national culture. "New
York, New Work, Now!" runs through Jan. 12, 2002 at the Currier
Museum of Art at 201 Myrtle Way.
Copyright
© 2002 HIPPOPRESS LLC. All rights reserved.
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