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"Funky Lessons": Burofriedrich.


Whenever anyone headed toward the exit during the daily run of "Funky Lessons," a young woman startled visitors by melodramatically swooning at their feet and, with a faraway gaze, uttering a few cryptic words before quickly rising and returning to the reception desk. She spoke in a monotone of moving "beyond the cul-de-sac of a false choice between harmless hermeticism and patronizing gestures," a dichotomy that formed the premise of this show organized by German critic and Frieze frieze, in architecture, the member of an entablature between the architrave and the cornice or any horizontal band used for decorative purposes. In the first type the Doric frieze alternates the metope and the triglyph; that of the other orders is plain or sculptured. The 5th-century B.C. treasury of the Cnidians at Delphi shows figures in the frieze. Roman and Renaissance examples, a notable one being on the 1st-century B.C. editor Jorg Heiser. Lifting lines from the show's press release, Tino Sehgal arranged for the impromptu performances (This Exhibition, 2004) as his artistic contribution. In this vein of comedy clashing with earnestness, Heiser also included twelve other artists who combine humor and didacticism to confront the charge of pedantry frequently leveled against conceptual art.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Even the show's title--adapted from Adrian Piper's well-known Funk Lessons, 1983, projected here onto a large wall--has an amusingly forced ring to it, sounding like a scene from Mike Myers's Saturday Night Live sketch "Dieter's Dance Party," though unlike Dieter, Piper's poker-faced directives are contradicted by the surprisingly loose and unselfconscious moves of her amateur dancers. The other historical anchor of the exhibition was John Baldessari's Baldessari Sings LeWitt, 1972, a seminal black-and-white video of the artist singing Sol LeWitt's instructional "Sentences on Conceptual Art," 1969, to tunes like "Tea for Two" and "Camptown Races." His hilariously deadpan performance confirms that the first-generation Conceptual artists themselves had a sense of how funny their typically stern and sober language could be.

The bulk of the exhibition consisted of work produced after theory became firmly entrenched in the art academies in the late '80s. Annika Strom's aphorisms aphorism (ăf`ərĭz'əm), short, pithy statement of an evident truth concerned with life or nature; distinguished from the axiom because its truth is not capable of scientific demonstration. Hippocrates was the first to use the term for his Aphorisms, briefly stated medical principles. painted in colorful block letters on paper--for example, I have no theory about this text, 2004--treat the emptiness at the heart of much "message-driven" art. Martin Gostner's series of eight posters, "Festival of Fog," 2004, pairs fictitious ads for yoga and kung fu courses with announcements for imaginary talks at BuroFriedrich. Eva Grubinger's Das Diaphaidon oder Oder (ō`dər), Czech and Pol. Odra, river, 562 mi (904 km) long; the second longest river of Poland. It rises in the E Sudetes, NE Czech Republic, and flows generally NW through SW Poland, then N along the Poland–Germany border to the Baltic Sea N of Szczecin, Poland. die dezente Verwechslung der Gleichaltrigen (The Diaphaidon, or the Discrete Mix-up of Contemporaries), 1991, shows the artist sitting before an unseen audience with a film of a caged hamster projected behind her; while reciting a litany of dry scientific texts, her High German gradually shifts to her less comprehensible native Salzburg dialect, undercutting her pedagogical clout. In fact, it is the insertion of the artistic self into the midst of an unassuming public that leads to situations of mutually awkward edification in some of the more recent pieces. Passersby gawk A version of the awk pattern matching language from the GNU foundation. See awk and GNU. as Andrea Fraser, prompted by an Acoustiguide tour, rubs her body provocatively against Frank Gehry's Bilbao Guggenheim interior in Little Frank and His Carp, 2001. Aleksandra Mir's roughly edited video Organized Movement, 2004, derives from footage shot at parties, on the street, and in stores as the artist made her way through the urban spectacle, coaching strangers to synchronize their movements or make spontaneous commentaries. Erik van Lieshout's video LARIAM Lar·i·am (lâr-m)
A trademark for the drug mefloquine.
, 2001, projected in a low shack made of cardboard and tape and resembling an upside-down pillbox pillbox, small, low fortification that houses machine guns and antitank weapons. Similar to a blockhouse, it is usually made of concrete, steel, logs, or filled sandbags. Pillboxes came into use during the early 20th cent. in the Belgian and French fortresses that were built before World War I. They were first used extensively by the Japanese in World War II., captures the artist in Ghana asking locals to help him turn a hard-to-pronounce Dutch phrase into a rap song. In all three, the artists themselves are caught up in an unpredictable exchange of information that does anything but guarantee their didactic authority. Yet having learned from their Conceptual-art predecessors, they do not completely abandon the goal of criticality--its effectiveness is simply no longer taken for granted.
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Title Annotation:BERLIN
Author:Williams, Gregory
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Jan 1, 2005
Words:577
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