"INTERCOURSE".UNTITLED VENUE "SEX. Now that I've got your attention..." Like the sales pitch that begins with that jokey jok·ey also jok·y adj. jok·i·er, jok·i·est Characterized by joking or jokes, especially stale or clumsy jokes: jokey bumper stickers. advertising ploy, this exhibition, titled "Intercourse," didn't have much to do with sex. In her statement for the show, curator Eileen Sommerman writes that the word "intercourse" denotes "communication or dealings between or among people, countries, etc.; interchange of products, services, ideas, feelings, etc." This is broad territory for such a modest show, and the three works don't really seem to fit into this formulation. But Sommerman's strengths as a curator have less to do with exposition than with her instinct for selecting great work and unusual spaces. The show, installed in an unnamed truck warehouse off an alley, featured one work each by London- and Berlin-based artist A.K. Dolven, the Australian John Nixon John Nixon may refer to:
reverse in position, direction or order. inverted L block a pattern of local filtration anesthesia commonly used in laparotomy in the ox. ). The only motion in the video, which was shot with a still camera, is that caused by a light breeze light breeze n. A wind with a speed of from 4 to 7 miles (6 to 11 kilometers) per hour, according to the Beaufort scale. Noun 1. touching the hair. This cryptic yet compelling gesture was extended as a loop: Lacking any narrative, the hand-held head appears to hang there indefinitely. Schneider's video projection Anne Schneider 1998 also depicts hands on a head, but instead of engaging in a poetic gesture, they enact a sequence of violent actions. Projected against the back wall of an alcove in the warehouse, the video follows Schneider as she struggles to turn a doll's head inside out, tugging and stretching the stiff, unyielding plastic. After nearly seven minutes of frustration (which we can only sense; her face is outside the frame), she finally succeeds and sets the bizarre inside-out head on the floor, bald, its eyeballs The number of users. "There are 110 eyeballs" means there are 110 users currently online. See eyeball hang time. bulging forward from their sockets. In the center of the adjacent wall was Nixon's Block Painting (Orange Monochrome), 1998, an orange felt-covered wood block about four inches square and one and a half inches deep. For the past five years, Nixon has worked only with the color orange--a conceptual gesture no less extraordinary than turning a head inside out or holding one upside down indefinitely. His work was the show's punctum punctum /punc·tum/ (pungk´tum) pl. punc´ta [L.] a point or small spot. punctum cae´cum blind spot. punctum lacrima´le lacrimal point. : a small, glowing, undeniably material object, the perfect counterpoint to the immateriality im·ma·te·ri·al·i·ty n. pl. im·ma·te·ri·al·i·ties 1. The state or quality of being immaterial. 2. Something immaterial. Noun 1. of video. Read in relation to one another, the works began to tease out issues that might link them but stopped short of anything definitive. For my own part, I enjoyed pondering what they collectively suggest about time, will, materiality MATERIALITY. That which is important; that which is not merely of form but of substance. 2. When a bill for discovery has been filed, for example, the defendant must answer every material fact which is charged in the bill, and the test in these cases seems to , the frame, the relationship of hand to head, etc. The paucity of works, sensitively installed, was bracing. Instead of overwhelming us with the usual group-show cacophony, Sommerman simply let us eavesdrop eaves·drop intr.v. eaves·dropped, eaves·drop·ping, eaves·drops To listen secretly to the private conversation of others. on an intriguing three-way conversation. |
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