Kristin Baker
Al Held
Fabian Marcaccio
William Scharf
William E. Massie
Eduardo Abaroa,
Francis Alys
Carlos Amorales
Gustavo Artigas
Miguel Calderon
Minerva Cuevas
Jose Davila
Ivan Edeza
Jonathan Hernandez
Gabriel Kuri
Teresa Margolles
Yoshua Okon
Ruben Ortiz Torres
Pedro Reyes
Daniela Rossell
Santiago Sierra
Melanie Smith
Enrique Metinides
Marcos Kurtycz
Terence Riley
Klaus Biesenbach
Biesenbach
Cuauhtemoc Medina
Guillermo Santamarina
Mexico City: An Exhibition about the Exchange Rates of Bodies and Values; a thematic exhibition of international contemporary art emerging from Mexico City. Painting Report: Plane The Essential of Painting Kristin Baker, Al Held, Fabian Marcaccio, William Scharf. Playa Urbana / Urban Beach: William E. Massie selected as the winner of the Third Annual MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program
P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center presents Mexico City: An
Exhibition about the Exchange Rates of Bodies and Values,
a thematic exhibition of international contemporary art emerging
from Mexico City. Living in a cramped space where Beverly Hills
and Calcutta meet everyday, the artists in this exhibition explore
the tension between wealth and poverty, between progress,
stagnation and improvisation, and between the violence and
civility that animates this vibrant city. Compounding the
complexity of urban living, high rates of kidnapping, murder, and
pollution become a daily threat. For the rich, the body becomes
an object to be cared for, protected, even exchanged for ransom,
while, for an underclass of day laborers, homeless people, and
prostitutes, survival depends on participation in physically
exploitative situations that place an exact commercial value on
the body.
Curated by Klaus Biesenbach, P.S.1 Chief Curator and founding
director of Kunst-Werke Berlin, this exhibition presents an
international group of artists including Eduardo Abaroa,
Francis Alÿs, Carlos Amorales, Gustavo Artigas, Miguel
Calderón, Minerva Cuevas, Jose Dávila, Ivan Edeza,
Jonathan Hernández, Gabriel Kuri, Teresa Margolles,
Yoshua Okón, Rubén Ortiz Torres, Pedro Reyes, Daniela
Rossell, Santiago Sierra, and Melanie Smith. In conjunction
with this exhibition, P.S.1 presents photographs by Enrique
Metinides, a former press photographer, as well works by
Marcos Kurtycz, a Polish-born artist who lived and worked in
Mexico City and whose "anti-art"performances, from the late
1970s to mid-1990s, influenced many artists from this new
generation. Mexico City: An Exhibition about the Exchange
Rates of Bodies and Values will be installed throughout P.S.1's
first floor galleries and café.
Yoshua Okón's video Chocorrol (1997) records two dogs,
a male Xoloitzcuintli and a female French poodle,
mating as a symbol of the mixing of two cultures, as one
breed violates the purity of the other. Gustavo Artigas'
The Rules of the Game (2000) presents a video of a
sporting event, staged by the artist, in which two
Mexican soccer teams and two American basketball
teams play simultaneously on the same court. Prepared
for the risk of injuries to the players, the artists was
surprised when both matches went without any major
disruptions, which suggested the viability of a healthy
co-existence of Mexicans and Americans along their
shared border. For No one over 21 (2000), Jonathan
Hernández collaborated with the popular Tijuana-based
musicians and the design group Torolab to create a
music video depicting San Diego teenagers crossing the
Tijuana border for a night of drinking and carousing.
Based on his experiences abroad, Carlos Amorales
examines identity, role-play, and spectacle through an
extended investigation into the realm of popular
Mexican wrestling.
Daniela Rossell's series of photographs, Ricas y
Famosas (1994-2002) capture the endangered species of
the rich and famous in their ornate and overprotective
environments, where the sexuality of these
stereotypically spoiled blondes is reduced to nothing but
an expensive commodity, or worse, to a cheap
decoration. In Francis Alÿs' series of photographs
Ambulantes (Pushing and Pulling) (1998-2002), the
artist captures people pushing and pulling their wares to
and from the marketplace, leveraging their body weight
against the commercial value they are physically
dragging along.
Works by Ivan Edeza, Teresa Margolles, and Santiago
Sierra explore how ritualized discrimination and exploitation has
rendered invisible the physical and psychological acts of
violence against the lives and deaths of the underclass. In
Vaporization (2002), Margolles fills the gallery with a foggy mist
created from the disinfected water used to wash corpses in the
city morgue. Her performance visualizes the physical memory of
a last washing, while also suggesting angelic disappearance or
bodies fading away. Sierra's new work at P.S.1 concentrates of
the current power structures of the evolving global economy and
focuses on the plight of the exploited laborers by demonstrating
the oppressive monotony of their daily routines. In De Negocios
y Placer (2000), Edeza presents found footage from a "violence
compilation tape" purchased on the black market depicting men
hunting and shooting Brazilian tribe members.
Referencing Barnett Newman's monumental sculpture, Eduardo
Abaroa's Portable Broken Obelisk (for Outdoor Markets)
(1991-1993) reworks the Western concept of the monument as a
temporary sculpture made of the same lightweight canvas and
aluminum used in makeshift stalls of local marketplaces.
Furthermore, his collaboration with Ruben Ortiz Torres, Elotes
/ MaÃz Transgénico (2002), consists of 50 replicas of chewed
"corn on sticks" forcing the audience to respond to what appears
to be garbage in an otherwise pristine gallery environment.
Combing architecture and fantasy, Pedro Reyes' dome-like
sculpture is made of plastic material used by prisoners to
produce shopping bags. Minerva Cueva's non-profit
organization Mejor Vida Corporation fuses art and social
activism. In her Barcode Replacement series, the artist copied
and altered barcodes on grocery store items, enabling shoppers
to purchase typically over-priced product at significantly reduced
prices. Gabriel Kuri's Tree with Chewing Gum (Ãrbol con
Chicles) (1999), a close-up view of a tree trunk spotted with
wads of brightly-colored chewed gum, investigates the poetic
and communicative potential in mundane objects, and records
human imprints that trace the passage of time.
Cristina Faesler and Jerónimo Hagerman present abcdf, a book
and CD-ROM that offers a vivid and multi-layered impression of
the metropolis through two thousand color images and forty-five
texts.
A catalogue published by P.S.1 will accompany Mexico City,
containing essays by Biesenbach, Cuauhtémoc Medina,
Guillermo Santamarina, and Patricia MartÃn, and color images of
works. The exhibition will tour to Kunst-Werke Berlin and the
Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil, Mexico. Dates to be announced.
This exhibition is made possible by the National Council of Arts
and Culture, the Mexico Institute of Cultural Cooperation, Rosa
and Gilberto Sandretto, the Mexican Cultural Institute of New
York, La Colección Jumex, Mexico; Grupo Modelo, Mexico;
Museo Carillo Gil, Mexico; Habita Hotel, Mexico. Special thanks
to GalerÃa Enrique Guerrero, Mexico; GalerÃa OMR, Mexico;
Greene Naftali, New York; Kurimanzutto Gallery, Mexico;
Galeria Nina Menocal, Mexico; Andrea Rosen Gallery, New
York.
Painting Report
Plane: The Essential of Painting Kristin Baker, Al Held, Fabian Marcaccio, William Scharf
Opening: June 30 - September, 2002
The founding definition of modernist painting was uttered by
Maurice Denis in his famous comment of 1890: "It must be
recalled that a picture - before it is a picture of a battle-horse,
nude woman, or some anecdote - is essentially a plane surface
covered by colors arranged in a certain order." As modernism
engaged in its ceaseless self-definition, the picture plane
became, at modernism's end, a sensitive surface that could not
be violated, "modernism's hymen" as one critic called it. The
literal surface defined by Denis had become its own metaphor, a
metaphor that enacted what some were pleased to see as
painting's death throes.
Painting's demise, like that of the Broadway theatre, has been
periodically announced. With post-modernism, some considered
painting to be an exalted form of letter-writing, personal
"expressions" irrelevant to the broader issues - economic,
gender, class, etc. - that projected the practice of art into wider
social contexts. It might be said, with some exaggeration, that
painting sometimes seemed to be confined to an intensive care
unit. But nothing is more invigorating for an artform (or religion)
than to be declared dead. The picture plane, the indispensable
fact, the basic essential, even essence, every painter must
ambiguously negotiate, and sanctioned by several hundred
years of tradition, is extraordinarily durable. From the point of
view of the picture plane, the act of painting, no matter how
revolutionary, is a conservative act and what is conserved is the
tradition of painting itself. That painting presently attracts
numerous young artists is further evidence that continuity - a
grand continuity - exists.
To illustrate some of these matters, this exhibition presents the
work of four painters whose practice implicitly defines their
attitudes to painting's "ground." While a vast expository
exhibition could be assembled to investigate this subject, this
exhibition limits itself to defining four different attitudes, each of
which stands for a quota of modernist/post-modernist time.
Part of the fascination of William Scharf's work is that it shows
us something we had speculated about but not seen - the
apotheosis of the symbolist/surreal beginnings of some abstract
expressionist paintings by an artist of rare power and dark
imagination. Scharf's picture plane is classic modernist, his
space conceived as a fluid potency in which he enacts dense
narratives the meaning of which center around generative
beginnings - the creative act pondering the act of creation.
However complex, the formal vocabulary is the classic push and
pull of color on a flat surface. The "the integrity of the picture
plane" applies here. The picture plane is as much at work as it
is in the paintings of Odilon Redon, to which Scharf's art has a
remote cousinship.
With Al Held's immense project we are engaged in a grand
reversal of one of late modernism's proscriptions: flatness.
Greenberg's theory that a medium ultimately reduces itself to
reveal its basic framework or fabric was partly instrumental in
excluding any reference to illusionism. To this, minimal
sculpture, excluded from painting's "dream-world," was a
response. Held's reaction was to embrace illusion and its
Renaissance handmaiden, perspective. His panoramas tunnel
and excavate vistas like, according to one critic, "abstract John
Martins." Held's rejection of modernist space in favor of a
relentless illusionism necessarily defines his picture plane as
post-modernist, as indeed is his subject. In terms of the theme
of this exhibition, he is a transitional figure through which a
change in the conception of the picture plane is enacted.
No more confident reinterpretation of the picture plane could be
imagined than that of Fabian Marcaccio in his "Untitled."
Recognizing the generative energies embodied in the traditional
surface, Marcaccio does not hesitate to tear it away from the
wall, even literally to tear it if need be. Curving across the corner,
laden with paint and plastic, imprinted with photo transfers, no
matter how extreme Marcaccio's handling may be, it is still the
picture plane that energizes his post-modernist conception of it.
Where Held moves illusionism inward, Marcaccio builds outward
with literal collage, encrustations and paint, occasionally
trapping pockets of illusion. While Marcaccio's canvasses may
stretch, sag, undulate and/or fold, they owe their vitality to the
artists' implicit acknowledgment of the picture plane described
by Maurice Denis one hundred and twelve years ago.
Changes in the way the picture plane is interpreted tend to
recondition it for re-use. The picture plane as interpreted by
Kristin Baker is a thin, swift tissue consonant with her subject -
the racing car and track. The "integrity of the picture plane" is
intact in these paintings, which, aware of their modernist
pedigree, discourse expertly between flatness and intimations of
depth. From her post-modernist place in time, Baker, a recent
Yale graduate, makes a connection to a previous tradition which
several young painters now feel free to exercise without guilt.
The durability of the picture plane as a locus of creative energy
is again certified by a member of a new generation.
To speak of the picture plane now is not without controversy.
Since it is a prime formal entity it is construed by many as part
of an aesthetic system largely consigned to the post-modernist
waste-basket. Enough time has gone by, however, that the
vicissitudes and transformations of this indispensable essential
of painting - its surface - may be redefined through four
examples that interpret it differently. These interpretations differ
as profoundly as the subject matter of the four artists. However
the picture plane may be conceived - a literal fact, a metaphor,
a surface to be inscribed - Robert Motherwell acknowledged its
dangerous potency years ago when he said, "I hope I can make
something as beautiful as the empty canvas."
Playa Urbana / Urban Beach: William E. Massie
Opening: June 30 - September 1, 2002
William E. Massie of New York has been selected as the winner
of the Third Annual MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program,
a competition that invites emerging architects to build projects at
P.S.1. The objective of the Young Architects Program is to
identify and provide an outlet for emerging young talent in
architecture, an ongoing mission of both MoMA and P.S.1. The
contestants were instructed to make the best use of P.S.1's
outdoor courtyard and available materials within the allotted
project budget, which is $50,000. Massie will realize his
proposal for the project Playa Urbana/Urban Beach, which
incorporates wading pools and shade elements in a refuge from
the urban summer. As in past years, the project will become the
centerpiece of Warm Up, P.S.1's popular music series held
annually in the courtyard. Massie's project is expected to be
complete by late-June.
Terence Riley, Chief Curator, Department of Architecture and
Design, The Museum of Modern Art, comments, "Bill Massie
demonstrates that real innovations in architectural design derive
from the fusion of theory and practice. Massie does as much
critical thinking on the job site as in the studio."
Playa Urbana/Urban Beach addresses concepts of surface and
sensuality, redefining shade, privacy, and space to create a new
landscape within P.S.1's existing large courtyard. The central
element of the project is a group of three shallow reflecting and
wading pools made of foam covered by plastic with a
phosphorescent sheen. Although the effect is not visible during
the day, at night this material appears to glow. When
unoccupied, the surface of the still water reflects the light and
color of the sky, uniting the natural and urban landscapes. Walls
made of evenly spaced PVC tubing undulate throughout the
courtyard in shapes that echo waves, providing shade. In the
smaller courtyard is an enclosure in which visitors can shower.