"Are we there yet?": Glass Box. (Paris).That nomadism nomadism Way of life of peoples who do not live continually in the same place but move cyclically or periodically. It is based on temporary centres whose stability depends on the available food supply and the technology for exploiting it. is a characteristic condition of life in the age of globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation has become something of a cliche. And some of our assumptions regarding the ever-increasing ease of international travel and the porousness of cultural boundaries have taken a severe battering over the past few months. This exhibition's title suggested the plaintive plain·tive adj. Expressing sorrow; mournful or melancholy. [Middle English plaintif, from Old French, aggrieved, lamenting, from plaint, complaint; see plaint. cry of a jaded traveler yearning for some sort of conclusion to a seemingly endless journey. Yet the assembled works combined to emphasize the illusory nature of any such sense of closure and the unlikely prospect of any definitive arrival. Spearheaded by Paul O'Neill and David Blarney Blarney, village, Co. Cork, SE Republic of Ireland. Those who kiss the Blarney Stone, placed in an almost inaccessible position near the top of the thick stone wall of the 15th-century castle, are supposed to gain marvelous powers of persuasion and cajolery. , London-based artists from Ireland and England respectively, who also enlisted Dublin-based artists Grace Weir and the Walker twins, this show unfurled itself in early October like a tightly packed traveling circus for a five-week stint at this well-established artist-run venue in Paris's latest bohemia, the up-and-coming Eleventh Arrondissement ar·ron·disse·ment n. 1. The chief administrative subdivision of a department in France. 2. A municipal subdivision in some large French cities. . Descending from street level into the main gallery space the visitor first encountered Walker & Walker's The Wanderer, 2000, from behind. This life-size model of the figure in the foreground of Caspar David Friedrich's Wanderer in the Mists, 1818, appropriately attired but apparently hovering on a cushion of light emanating from the soles of his boots, magisterially mag·is·te·ri·al adj. 1. a. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a master or teacher; authoritative: a magisterial account of the history of the English language. b. surveyed a narrow garden walkway through one of the gallery's trademark glass walls. The Wanderer shared gallery space with a monitor displaying Weir's Return, 2001, a loop of footage shot from a camera rapidly submerging in a turbulent sea, resurfacing, and soaring skyward sky·ward adv. & adj. At or toward the sky. sky wards adv. only to plunge back into the sea again. Weir's second video, Clock, 2001, was comparably cyclical, comprising a looped one-second-long close-up of a solitary dandelion dandelion [Eng. form of Fr.,=lion's tooth], any plant of the genus Taraxacum of the family Asteraceae (aster family), perennial herbs of wide distribution in temperate regions. blown by the wind. Scattering seeds right and left, but nonetheless giving the impression of continual renewal, Clock cheated time; with the same disarming simplicity, Blarney's two adjacent works faked space. O ne was a section of dark blue wall-to-wall carpeting covered with hundreds of polystyrene balls of various sizes. A brief trudge through this down-to-earth night sky, Floor Space, 2001, led to Blarney's second piece, Wall Space, 2001, a projection of a similarly starlit star·lit adj. Illuminated by starlight. starlit Adjective lit by starlight Adj. 1. sky onto a large blank canvas casually propped against a wall. This particular starry night, however, was produced by projecting light from an overhead projector through a pinpricked sheet of paper. Such a low-tech presentation of the Do-It-Yourself Sublime belied the fact that the pinpricks actually represented a page-upon-page overlay of all the full stops in Stephen Hawking and George F.R. Ellis's The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time, thereby constituting a literal punctuation of the figuratively impenetrable. O'Neill's video The Blue Danube, 2001, footage shot from the window of a car waltzing crazily around an enormous French parking lot to Strauss's familiar melody, was as soothing as his Forest Fresh, 2001, was abrasive. The latter w as a miniature plantation of hundreds of tree-shaped Forest Fresh air fresheners, located in a small room off a short dead-end corridor. This sculpture's increasingly pungent assault on the nostrils of a packed opening-night crowd was as discomfiting and rebarbative re·bar·ba·tive adj. Tending to irritate; repellent: "He became rebarbative, prickly, spiteful" Robert Craft. as O'Neill's third work, No, 2001, a small neon sign in which the "no" of NO VACANCIES switched on and off repeatedly. "Are We There Yet?" was a closely orchestrated essay on open-endedness, the ordinariness of the infinite, and the perennial quandaries of repetition, contradiction, and deferral. |
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