M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
 

art reviews

 

 

 

Patty Chang
New Museum of Contemporary Art
>>
By Lily Faust

Bruce Busby / David Brody
Pierogi Gallery
>>
By Mary Hrbacek

Lee Friedlander
Museum of Modern Art
>>
By Joel Simpson

Los Caprichos & Here Comes the Bogey-Man
Chelsea Art Museum>>

By Jari Chevalier

Robert Wilson
12th Annual Watermill Center Summer Benefit
>>
By Nicollette Ramirez

Tete A Tete
Greenberg Van Doren Gallery>>

By Chris Twomey

The Photograph In Question at Von Lintel Gallery>>
By Chris Twomey

On the Official and the Unofficial
The 51st Venice Biennale
>>
By Leeza Ahmady

              


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Patty Chang
New Museum of Contemporary Art

By Lily Faust

Shangri-La in 1933, a fictitious region in the Himalayas that evokes seductive images of utopia in our imagination, originates in British novelist James Hilton‚s bestseller, Lost Horizon.

1937 — Frank Kapra‚s Oscar winning film, Lost Horizon, based on the Hilton novel, expands on the virtues of this mythic terrain, further popularizing the existence of Utopia.

1997 — Zhongdian, a town in the Chinese province of Yunnan, near the Tibetan border, portrays itself as the inspiration for James Hilton‚s Shangri-La, hoping this will attract tourists; in fact James Hilton had never set foot in Zhongdian.)

1998 — Several towns adjacent to Zhongdian proclaim their town the “True Shangri-La,” causing havoc in the minds of tourists.

2001 — The Chinese government intervenes, authenticating Zhongdian as Shangri-La, the certified namesake of an imaginary terrain.

2005 — Patty Chang, a performance and video artist of Chinese descent, travels to Shangri-La to make a video about the idea of Shangri-La.

These are the elemental facts surrounding Shangri-La, the factoidal Utopia; Shangri-La, the town; and Shangri-La, the 40-minute Patty Chang video, commissioned by Hammer Museum, L.A., Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York. The work plumbs different aspects of the idea of Shangri-La, inserting the pyramid shaped mountain of the original story in unlikely, and amusing juxtapositions.

Shot in south-central China near the Tibetan border, the video begins with a view of the snow-covered mountains towering above Shangri-La and progresses jerkily along a loosely handled, chopped up narrative structure. With sub-titles that clarify the direction of the minimal conversation, the segments cohere around models of Shangri-La, symbolizing the fabled land of the iconic triangular mountain. Inside a hotel atrium, a replica of the snow-covered mountains offers a theme-park view of the myth to the guests. Outside, under a makeshift enclosure, two Chinese laborers attempt to replicate the mountain range in white styrofoam, sawing off and layering triangular pieces to match the mountain‚s varying facets. They reference a photograph of the mountain from time to time to ensure they get the angles just so. The wind blows granules of the styrofoam, about the size of snow flakes, around the laborers, creating an artificial approximation of the area’s climactic conditions.

Deviations occur. A photographer takes images of a Chinese bride (Patty Chang as the bride) and her Western groom. The bride is instructed on how to pose in the formulaic choreography of still another vision of perfection. Red-robed Tibetan monks enter the tubular oxygen chamber to get a relief from altitude sickness. A baker and his assistant create a small angel-cake imitation of the mountains, slathering the cake in white icing (or is it white plaster?). A miniature copy of the tubular oxygen chamber, also covered in icing, is nudged against the frosted mountains on the cake, like reality knocking on the door of dreams.

Elsewhere in town, in pursuit of capturing a new likeness of the myth, three men begin to construct a more ambitious interpretation of Shangri-La, one that resembles a multifaceted crystal mountain (Think Bruno Taut’s fantastic drawings, Alpine Architecture, 1920, and Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain, 1924). With its plywood backing supporting triangular mirrors, it presents a dazzling façade, reflecting fleeting images of all that passes by. As it gets loaded on a bright blue truck, it catches bits and pieces of the environment but settles mostly on the clear blue sky, a metaphor for nothingness, the x-factor of the unknown. And then it travels down a meandering highway, and beyond.

Chang’s video is supported by the inevitable judgment that Utopia is a myth, and that any attempted representation of it is, at best, naïve. In aligning mock-reality as a substitute for the fictive perfect, the people of Chang’s Shangri-La become both victims and perpetrators of a cosmic joke; a futile quest for heaven on earth. The work revels in the flaws of inept representations of Shangri-la, doling out botched-up versions of the mountain range, in cake, in styrofoam, and in the playful illusions of the cascading mirrors. Paralleling the town’s efforts in its crude commercial aspirations, Chang creates a video that leaves loose ends throughout. (What happens to the bridal party? Why is the Shangri-La cake placed on a shelf among other decorated cakes and then removed? Does anyone get to eat it?) Weaving a jagged story line, the work devolves into a collage of playful scenes, interspersed with performances of what could be considered gestures within daily Chinese life. Lacking the intensity and theatricality of Chang’s earlier video/performance work, such as In Love (2001) or Shaved (At a Loss) (1998) Shangri-La becomes a state of mind, commenting obliquely on the branding of idealization.

Adjacent to the video room where Shangri-La is screened, a viridian green Ford Ranger XLT is parked. An actual truck, it is reminiscent of the blue truck of the video.
With its right front window rolled down half-way, its windshield cracked, its rear-view mirror pulled off its adhesive and left on the dashboard and its key left in ignition, the truck appears set to go. The truck-bed holds the glass mountain; its multitude of facets cut out of shimmering mirrors, and its silhouette outlined in red on its plywood back. In Chang’s words, the mirrored mountain constitutes “a cross between a prayer wheel and a disco ball.” Shimmering and fun, the work is a prankish monument to the lexicon of longing and desire, mirroring illusions in jagged, fragmented reflections.

Through 9/10.


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Bruce Busby / David Brody
Pierogi Gallery

By Mary Hrbacek

Eloquent and ethereal, Bruce Busby's silky parachute Creativity Enhancement Shelters mirrors professional camping equipment with a difference: these tent-like structures approach an expressive fragility that stresses their esthetic attributes above and beyond utilitarian functions. The carefully crafted works evoke a sense of utopian purity and other-worldliness. Rather than serving as a shelter from natural elements, they become private sanctuaries from the worldly distractions that stand between artists and their creative productivity. The pure white suggests a high state of being, but here bliss is equated with peace and refuge.

Busby's imaginative pencil on paper drawings resemble crushed paper bags that have been reopened and reconfigured into shapes that suggest monumental mountainous terrain. Slender, ribbon-like shapes trail out expressively around their edges to create indeterminate hybrid forms sometimes seen in cartoons. They add a light touch that elicits a playful viewer response.

Employing lines of pale ethereal wash, Brody fashions fluid, fragmented, stream-of-consciousness forms that flow through and around what appear to be monumental architectural arenas. Subtle fluctuations of luminous tones and lines build interior areas that alternately suggest rock faces and ancient ruins. The lack of specific definition in the surrounding space draws the viewer closer,trying to discern what is taking place in the indeterminate zones where clarity gives way to amorphous linear marks. As such, these pieces bear a relationship to Ursula Von Rydingsvard's recent wood sculptures.
The most intriguing work, Planet of the Archbuilders, yields structures that are loosely defined by complex ghoulish heads or classical stonework. Here nature and architecture, past and present, co-exist in a balanced vision that is fraught with a heightened tension fueled by our uncertainty as to the actual status of the open-ended images portrayed.

5/27 through 6/27.


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Lee Friedlander
Museum of Modern Art

ByJoel Simpson

This thorough and ambitious survey of 71-year-old photographer Lee Friedlander’s life work consists of over five hundred of the photographer’s images, curated by MoMA’s director of photography, Peter Galassi. Friedlander came up as one of the American social documentarists emerging in the 1950s and 60s, along with Gary Winogrand, Larry Clark, Robert Frank and William Klein. His idol was Walker Evans, the pioneering American truth-teller of the Depression (and of course Dorothea Lange).

From his first published photographs in the 1960s, Friedlander revealed a fascination with the visually contingent. In one of his earliest images, for example, a television set’s picture contrasts with its environment — the macho motorcycle rider on the small screen is flanked by a somber radiator three times its size in an otherwise empty room, suggesting a tougher reality inhabited by the consumer of the image. He masters the art of ironic juxtaposition — the power of photography to reveal the surreal in the real, according to Eugène Atget, writing in the 1920s — and this understanding combines with his sensitivity to the visual meaning of what others might regard as extraneous.

Objects other photographers might have edited out, according to the classic rules of clarity and simplicity of statement, Friedlander, somewhat impishly, keeps in: the pole in front of the dog, the chopped off face, the unsightly chain-link fence. Armed with this sensitivity, he expanded his surreal sense of juxtaposition to make momentous statements on the banality of modern life: a drunk lies bent under a liquor store window displaying a large inflated bottle of Stock vermouth, whose neck is similarly bent, while passersby look on walking in opposite directions. Or he finds humor in the super-imposition offered by store windows. A sample bedroom show window, featuring a garish knit quilt, gives way in the upper part of the frame to a receding perspective of a city street, surmounted by an old-style street lamp and a church spire with transverse telephone wires, while the ghostly fluorescent fixtures of the store interior intrudes through that space. The bed thus becomes the setting for a dreary urban dream-scape, with the light fixtures adding bureaucratic punctuation.

Friedlander took the theme of American banality and gave it a historical twist in his collection of photographs titled The American Monument (1976). Here he presents a series of statues and memorials — to Civil War battles, generals, presidents, and other notables, even the riderless horse of film cowboy Tom Mix — in their sometimes trivializing, and sometimes sobering settings. One of the more iconic images shows the eight-foot statue of Father Duffy in Times Square, enveloped by the galloping commercialism of the place. The point seems to be that our history is ineluctably there, whether we are paying attention or not, grave, noble, neglected, silent — but present.

A series of young female nudes occupies one wall. Here Friedlander manages to avoid both extremes of figure study and pornography, by posing these young women quite matter-of-factly, with often hairy vulvas prominently displayed. Their apparently distracted mood contrasts sharply with the intimate, almost clinical self-revelation, leaving the viewer either in mild shock, or reflecting on what bodies really look like under those civilizing clothes.

In more recent outdoor work, Friedlander’s combined interest in the contingent, the banal and the ironic blossoms into a fascination with what might be called busy foreground screens. In a series of five or six photographs of the Chicago Art Institute in Jackson Park, the building is always seen through the branches of various trees. In another taken at Mount Rushmore, we are looking at the glassed-in side of the visitor center, with tourists peering at the mountainous sculpture through binoculars or other devices, while the Presidential figures themselves reflect distantly in the glass above. Later in his Sticks and Stones: Architectural America (2004) he returns to the urban landscape, but in full possession of his juxtapositional and obtrusive style. A cityscape is dominated by the head of a stoplight on a pole, with a pedestrian in the background; the chain link fence becomes a major screen motif, filling most of the frame.

Along the way Friedlander did fine work documenting workers in his Factory Valleys: Ohio and Pennsylvania (1982). We see working people intent on their jobs, looking into computer screens at their desks, working complicated machines, presiding over loaves of bread about to be baked. In this last one, the worker is wearing a tee-shirt showing portraits presumably of two family members, perhaps including herself, the kind of thing one has made at a shopping mall. Her breasts fill up these portraits in a sly physical analogy to the loaves of bread she must bake, laid out in front of her.

He also made many portraits, apparently mainly of friends and people he knew, including fellow photographers such as John Coplans and Gary Winogrand; artists such as the American expatriate R. B. Kitaj; and especially New Orleans musicians such as Sweet Emma Barrett and Billie and Dee Dee Pierce, as well as tender renderings of New Yorker Alan Jaffe and his wife, founders of Preservation Hall.

During the 1990s Friedlander turned to the Hasselblad medium format camera with its square frame. He attached a super-wide angle lens to it and headed out to the deserts of the Western US. Here he seems to have become fascinated with the energy of desert brambles, for most of his images are filled with twisted masses of branches and twigs—his newest screen. The Grand Tetons themselves are almost an afterthought, far in the background, while a tangle of branches occupy center stage. Friedlander seems to discover a Jackson-Pollok-like energy in these branches, all realized in yard-square black and white prints. We’re at the opposite pole here from the gripping scenics of Ansel Adams, or the dramatic graphics of Edward Weston. More and more, Friedlander focuses on complex patterns of line, leaf and dapple.

Through it all, Friedlander’s own image, and those of his family members, play an ever-growing role. They start out in the form of the photographer’s shadow, as in the famous one of his crew-cutted head projected on the back of a blond woman’s fake fur coat (1966). We see him, handsome and thin in the 60s holding his Leica, and finally as portly and round-faced in the 90s in a series of frank self-portraits, in which there is always some play of light: shadow, projection, reflection. We feel by this time, in this well exceptionally well organized show, that Friedlander deserves his bow.

6/5 through 9/29.


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Los Caprichos & Here Comes the Bogey-Man
Chelsea Art Museum

By Jari Chevalier

This innovative exhibition pairs Los Caprichos, Goya’s original set of eighty etching produced in 1799 with the work of eleven contemporary artists from today, whose work is influenced by Goya’s masterpieces. Dubbed Here comes the Bogey-Man, the new work is hung interspersed among Goya’s etching.

Los Caprichos is a picture book of human vanity, cruelty, arrogance and stupidity — Gothic social satire with a Freudian twist. We see aristocrats in their finery with a retinue of grotesque and bestial attendants; throngs of coarse and pious peasants; a crowned idiot-child with pointer finger in his drooling mouth; a monkey painting a portrait of an ass; asses riding on the backs of men; people with padlocks on their ears; the grooming, primping and pampering of horrible creatures by obsequious, resigned inferiors. These are but a few of the poetic, libidinous and confrontational images that abound in Goya’s prodigious works. He invokes Freud, Nietzsche, Darwin and Marx at once.

The content of Los Caprichos, (The Impulses) is highlighted by their u niformity of size, color, technique and framing. Goya is also not averse to repeating himself, perhaps because he takes as his subject the mechanisms through which human suffering is perpetuated; confronting the viewer with depictions of ignorance, sadism, denial, hypocrisy, manipulation, ridicule and domination.

One of the most disturbing is Todos Caeran (All Will Fall). A chicken with a human head whose open eyes scream horror and whose mouth shoots a jet of fluid to the ground is skewered from the rear, being readied for roasting by two rotund, indifferent women. A third stooped, deformed and elderly female raises her gaze to the perched chicken-people in the bare branch above while others fly into the scene.

Perhaps not surprisingly, none of the contemporary artists is as graphic and unsettling as Goya. Even Yasumasa Morimura’s effective staging of Goya’s images in her life-size C-prints lack the impact of the motivating originals. Morimura’s theatrical realism brings Technicolor mercy to images Goya uses to poke at our psyches through his scratchy monochromatic surrealism.

Yun-Fei Ji’s works, however, are tonally reminiscent of the Goya pieces and they share socio-political concerns, yet these, too, do not pack the punch.

Ray Smith’s Acrobacia Canina series comes closest to approaching Goya’s impact. His pointy-eared dog-men suggest both a sophisticated understanding of Goya’s iconography and an authoritative personal rendering.

The novelist E. M. Forster said that a function of art is to make us feel small in the right way. Surely this exhibition has that “right way” about it.

Through 9/24.


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Robert Wilson
12th Annual Watermill Center Summer Benefit

By Nicollette Ramirez

This year's Watermill Center Benefit for its international artist-in-residence program, which took place at the Center’s secluded six acre site in Hamptons during the summer, focused on Brazil for its thematic punch. The artists in residence included Paula Gabriela, Os Gemeos, Tatiana Grinberg and João Modé. During the month long residency they worked independently and in collaboration with Robert Wilson and artists from some thirty-two countries, creating an impressive range of visual art and performance pieces.

The Center was founded by Robert Wilson in 1992 and has since then functioned as a hub of creativity, bringing together an international mix of artists and artistic disciplines, ranging from drama, design, painting, sculpture and dance. These works, made during the residency, remained on view through August.

For the opening festivities, Paola Gabriela did a performance with a colleague in the middle of a table of hors d'oeuvres, chanting a Portuguese phrase that equated Food Nutrition with Art Nutrition as they nibbled on the fare. The chanting fell against the backdrop of birch trees and wooden shavings that covered the earth, suggesting the ritual of forest ceremonies like the ones performed by legendary Druids of the past. Paolo also constructed the large wall sculpture composed of iron tubes, silver yarn and pipes of varying shapes in red, black and blue that snaked in and out of the structure of the building.

Tatiana Grinberg made a wooden construction with cut-outs that allowed light to pass through and create shapes in the dark of the night. One such cut-out was placed in the center of the auction, and this proved popular with the children who played with a costumed character painted in silver with round mirrors adhering to his silver bodysuit. Another cut-out wall construct of plain wood stood in the center of the open area.

Also a big hit with visitors was João's Modé's wooden sculpture in the birch trees. A precarious ladder led one up to a view of a long plank that fell off in the distance. To be sure, after being curious enough to climb up and see what’s going on, it begs the question: Was is it worth it? Here the line between performance and participatory art is cleverly obscured.

Party-goers played under a net made from yarn of different colors that stretched between the trees; it looked like a man made spider web with people having fun, taking pictures. The playfulness of this piece seemed a fitting metaphor for the playfulness of the whole atmosphere of the benefit. The artists, both performers and visual artists, made the natural space and the man-made structures come alive.

Os Gemeos made a large wall mural in which his signature flat characters stare out at the viewer with childlike frankness. One of Gemeos's paintings was also presented in the silent auction.

This year's benefit featured both a silent and a live auction led by Simon de Pury of Phillips de Pury & Co. Lithographs by Jeff Koons and Willem de Kooning were favorites of the silent auction. Spencer Tunick's C-print from an installation in Buffalo proved to be another popular work. A small sculpture from Kiki Smith’s kiln-cast lead crystal, Tail (1997), garnered a lot of attention along with a 1979 self-portrait by artist Chuck Close.

Besides contemporary art, there was also a sampling of antique sculpture from Asia on display that came from Mr. Wilson's private collection.
Dubbed the destination of choice for art partygoers in the Hamptons, this gala gathering seems to get better each year. Funds raised during the evening support Watermill programs and a capitol campaign for the completion of a permanent facility at the Center.

7/30.

Ed Note: For more information about the Water Mill Center, contact Charles Fabius, Executive Director of the Byrd Hoffman Water Mill Foundation, tel: 212.253.7484


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Tete A Tete
Greenberg Van Doren Gallery

By Chris Twomey

This group show, curated by Augusto Arbizo, pairs contemporary masters with emerging and newly established artists who share similar esthetic and conceptual concerns. The drawings, paintings, photography, and sculpture of some thirty artists deftly juxtapose the familiar with discovery of the new. Along the way, tantalizing questions are raised, complimenting the visual matchmaking.

A 1979 Jennifer Bartlett is paired with a 2005 Louise Belcourt, both sporting cool, blue backgrounds to support white shapes in a confabulated space. Dorthea Rockburn and Mark Grotjahn each exhibit elegant line renderings, with the linear focus converging to center.

Several 2000 Chris Ofili watercolor portraits hang next to a 1986 Jacob Lawrence portrait made with silk screen and stencils. Here, differing techniques shown by these two artists; watercolors and silkscreen, produce surprisingly similar graphic effects.

An obscure suite of Andy Warhol silk screens titled Abstract Sculpture hangs adjacent to paintings by young conceptual artist Wade Guyton. These "paintings" are really inkjet on linen. Uncannily alike, the large standard formatted size of Guytons’ work give his piece the contemporary edge. Richard Deibenkorn and Brice Marden also make a welcome appearance. Their line matrixes read like maps leading to two different countries.

A 1970’s portrait by Barkley Hendricks titled Vendetta (Bitch) is matched with a recent Diva Fiction portrait by Kurt Kauper, adding a deeper context. Hendrick’s painting exudes sophistication in his use of photography-like cropping and color. The white field and clothes on his black woman model, framing her skin in near silhouette, enhances Hendrick’s social commentary. In contrast, Kauper places his more recent Diva Fiction in a full body pose, center frame, complete with painterly modeling and rendering. The effect is stylized, questioning whether the 1970’s ever really happened. Ultimately, the premise of Tete a Tete takes on a more complex reverie.

Why are these young artists using the style and manner of mark-making, imagery, and subject matter of their precedents, even thirty years later? Is it coincidence that these images are so alike, or is this a symptom of a long gestation while the role painting in the 21st century is reconsidered?

Imagine the names of the artists to be switched, along with the huge price differential between old contemporary masters and new. The question now becomes: What are we valuing? What happens when we remove context, the written adjunct to all image making? It is here, where curator Arbizo becomes coyly subversive, undermining the status quo by raising the stakes.

6/9 through 7/8


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The Photograph In Question at Von Lintel Gallery

By Chris Twomey

For all of the technological advances, photography is still in the infancy of its re-invention. Artists increasingly break the rules and appropriate the best and the worst of this ubiquitous discipline and its digital offshoots. The hybridization of the medium has, nevertheless, come a long way even over the past few years. One of the first exhibitions to explore this theme, Impure Photography III, broached the idea in a 1999 group show at Gallery Taranto in Chelsea The gallery has since taken a hiatus, but is this older and presumably wiser exhibit at Von Lintel Gallery offers a lush sampling of crossbreeding, self-referencing, and pure technical virtuosity created by some of the more astute practitioners of photo informed image making today.

The works of some twenty-two artists represented here could be loosely grouped into technical categories of photographic “impurity.” Artists who manipulate the photographic image using digital means include Matthias Geiger, Deborah Roan, Penelope Umbrico and Laura Carton. Each of these artists displaces, removes, or overlaps elements of the photographic picture, refocusing our reading of the altered photograph for deeper meaning.

Those who print on unusual materials include Arnold Helbling, whose appropriated media figures glow like sacred icons when processed onto a cloth-like surface. Orit Raff applies blueprint techniques to the imaging of large scale poetic renderings of her empty bed, and Roger Newton fabricates his own lenses and formulas to create enigmatic objects that are printed directly on coated wooden panels.

Utilizing innovative photo process, John Chiara’s large scale, inky blue landscapes are shot with a hand-built camera that is big enough to stand in; James Welling exposes light directly onto colored paper resulting in a painterly color field effect; and Gary Schneider’s gorgeous black and white compositions from his Genetic Self-Portrait series present microscopic blow-ups of his retinas.

Physically altering and re-interpreting the photograph by hand is another effective method of photographic rule-breaking. Taking this one step further, Marina Berios’ precise drawings meticulously copy the abstract photographic negatives she culls from trees, road sides, and fireworks, so the end product is actually a drawing on paper. Vik Muniz recreates his photographic image from household materials, such as sugar crystals, and then documents this glued recreation with a final photograph. John Reilly’s Polaroid collages and Richard Galpins skeletal structures utilize cut-and-paste methods while William Anastasi draws directly on photograph negatives.

Eric Hanson, Mel Bochner, Shimon Atties, and Sarah Charlesworth operate from conceptual premises which dictate the use of the conventional photography methods they employ. Charlesworth’s ethereal photograph, at first glance, reads like a faint white geometric shape submerged in white liquid. It is actually a photograph of a book veiled with white silk, which obscures the printed words. She examines language and its relationship to how we read images. What we see in this show is often not what it appears to be; it is so much more.

6/9 through 7/29.


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On the Official and the Unofficial
The 51st Venice Biennale

By Leeza Ahmady

The 51st Venice Biennale has been expanded considerably, with more countries participating than ever before. For the first time in its 110 year history, Albania, Morocco, China, Belarus, Afghanistan and a cluster of Central Asian nations; Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan were represented.

Afghanistan inaugurated its pavilion with two artists. Lida Abdul, who was born in Kabul and lived in Germany and India as a refugee before coming to US; and Raheem Walizada, a rug designer who also owns a gallery in New York. Both artists live and work in between Afghanistan, US and Europe.

Abdul’s short film, Clapping with Stones was shot on location in Bamiyan, in front of the famous defaced Buddha statues. The artist returned to Afghanistan to create three new works that were shot in 16mm film and transferred to video for the Biennale. In another work, White House, Abdul is seen painting the ruins of a building white, while in Landscape I, men dressed in black carry a large tree trunk across a barren landscape.

Most of these videos are silent performance-based works charged with visual potency. Experiences of loss, tragedy and fragmentation are explored through ritualized exercises that sanction expression to the artist’s profound desire for understanding life’s events.

In 1997, Sislej Xhafa wandered around pavilions at the Venice Biennale carrying a soccer ball, and listening to a match on a radio while asking people to play soccer with him. He had painted his torso red, and had a small Albanian flag stuck on to his backpack. "He was the roving Albanian pavilion". Like Afghanistan, Albania too finally got a proper pavilion this year. Xhafa, who is known for activities that often push the envelope, continued his onslaught against societal norms with a giant sculpture of a Ku Klux Klan mask, titled Ceremonial Crying System. The enormous mask, which really did cry, was prominently placed at the entrance of the Giardini, visible from miles away.

A year and half ago in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, Kurama Art director Churek Djamgerchinova spoke of her dissatisfaction with the art world’s ignorance in regards to Central Asia. Her decision to change this fact as well as the collective efforts of many artists and art practitioners in the region, and abroad, drove her to commission the Central Asian pavilion at the Venice Biennale.

The pavilion was curated by Viktor Misiano, whose strategy for the exhibition was to archive more than a decade of works by 20 of the most dynamic artists in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

This year’s Biennale was especially strong in the area of video. From Rebecca Belmore’s Fountain (2005), to Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’s Reading for Corpses (2002), to Kim Sooja’s A Needle Woman series, (2000-2003) the best works incorporated an element of video. Central Asian artists too, have been making video, mostly performance-based works in an extraordinarily efficient and effective manner. Maybe it’s their inheritance of centuries of myth & ritual that so fluidly and simply allows them to articulate realities of their collective, but also that of the world society at large.

One striking piece at the Central Asian Pavilion was the work of Gulnara Kasmalieva and Muratbek Djoumaliev, a husband and wife team who began their work at the end of the 1980’s in Kyrgyzstan. Trans Siberian Amazons (2004) is a video-installation about the lives of women whose means for economic survival, since the collapse of the Soviet Union, has been to trade imported goods on trains to passengers who are as poor and as spiritually weary as they. Much like "bootleggers "during the prohibition era in the United States during the 1920s, "suitcase traders" has become a massive, social manifestation in post-Soviet space during the last fifteen years.

Almagul Menlibayeva is said to represent the modern image of a female nomad traveling in art as freely as in real life. For the Biennale she created a room installation that incorporated many of her video works Steppe Baroque (2002), Apa (2003), A Wild Sheep Chase (2002) and Vagon (2002). Trained in Kazakh painting and batik traditions, she is set on using symbolism & decoration to create the sense of the magical in her works. Almagul’s aluring videos transport us to a world of beautiful women tasked with strange rituals in fantastic places, sometimes nude, sometimes half dressed, dancing in the snow, or tumbling through beautiful landscapes in colorful turbans, scarves and shawls. It seems that the old boy’s network has finally given way to make room for the rest of the world at this year’s Venice Biennale.

 


 
 

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