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"Magritte and contemporary art: the treachery of images"; Los Angeles County Museum of Art.


Suzi Gablik, author of a key English-language study of Rene Magritte, noted that the Belgian master was a "son of boredom." Possessed of "an almost constitutional dislike of painting,... he makes use of objects which have the appearance of paintings." Instead of exploring his boredom, his tender antipathy, the curators of this show--in which the artist's oeuvre is juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 with a variety of contemporary selections--have opted instead to reify reify - To regard (something abstract) as a material thing.  his commercial popularity, allowing the sweet smell of success to waft as the omnipresent odor of the lowest common denominator low·est common denominator
n.
1. See least common denominator.

2.
a. The most basic, least sophisticated level of taste, sensibility, or opinion among a group of people.

b.
.

The price of admission to the show is steep, a not unsalient commercial fact about an exhibition whose crass installation, spearheaded by Michael Govan, curated by Stephanie Barron, and designed by John Baldessari, requires museum guards to wear bowler hats. Capitalizing on Magritte's sign of the artist-as-everyman/businessman, the institution also makes hats available for sale in a gift shop housed within the exhibition space itself. Baldessari had the museum floors carpeted with wall-to-wall Magritte-y blue skies and clouds, covered the ceiling with pictures of looping Los Angeles freeways, and scrimmed one window with an image of the Manhattan skyline, design choices made even more awful by other decisions simultaneously frustrating and bizarre. Magritte's painting The Red Model, 1937, for example, is displayed as a "full-scale" unaccredited photograph because its loan could not be secured for the exhibit's entire run. Fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli, whose scent "pour l'homme elegant," Snuff, is bottled in a pipe-shaped crystal flask, goes unacknowledged as an artist, even though her pipe is displayed in the same vitrine with Sherrie Levine's Une Pipe (A Pipe), 2001, and regardless of the fact that both are contextualized by an exhibit in which an artist by design almost overwhelmed art. I'm not sure whether to chalk all of this up to an astounding a·stound  
tr.v. a·stound·ed, a·stound·ing, a·stounds
To astonish and bewilder. See Synonyms at surprise.



[From Middle English astoned, past participle of astonen,
 mistranslation mis·trans·late  
tr.v. mis·trans·lat·ed, mis·trans·lat·ing, mis·trans·lates
To translate incorrectly.



mis
 of Ceci n'est pas un pipe or an abandonment of criticality; either way, it's depressing given Magritte's inspiring demonstrations of the differences within the representation's repetitions--that a painting of a pipe isn't a pipe but is only, as Michel Foucault noted, "the least of the ambiguities."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Limning Magritte's "lasting and pervasive artistic influence" is the curators' stated aim, but influence is a tricky, even treacherous, affair: Is an artwork that announces its indebtedness or homage necessarily more indebted than one that doesn't? Some of the questions the curators never examine are nonetheless posed by many of the artworks themselves. What is demonstrated about influence's constantly scrambling multivalence mul·ti·va·lent  
adj.
1. Chemistry Polyvalent.

2. Genetics Of or relating to the association of three or more homologous chromosomes during the first division of meiosis.

3.
, for example, if Levine with her pipe negotiates, paradoxically, Duchamp "more than" Magritte, despite her patent and/or apparent appropriation of his iconic imagery?

But whatever its aporia a·po·ri·a  
n.
1. A figure of speech in which the speaker expresses or purports to be in doubt about a question.

2. An insoluble contradiction or paradox in a text's meanings.
 and failings, this show still manages to wow. Whether Magritte's madcap The Cut-Glass Bath, 1946, with its giraffe wedged into a water goblet, or his proleptically Sean Landers-like The Ellipsis A three-dot symbol used to show an incomplete statement. Ellipses are used in on-screen menus to convey that there is more to come. , 1948, in which a natty Gumby-type worries about his shotgun schnoz schnoz   also schnoz·zle
n. Slang
The human nose.



[Probably alteration of Yiddish snoyts, snout, muzzle, from German Schnauze.]

Noun 1.
, both look fresh and unlikely. Jasper Johns, from whose own collection of Magrittes many choice selections were borrowed, nods to Magritte's Scheherazade, 1950, to Jack Smith, and to his own ambiguous past in Montez Singing, 1989-90, in which painted boards are unnailed from a window or closet to reveal a landscape in the guise of a face. Two selections from Douglas Huebler's late, enthralling en·thrall  
tr.v. en·thralled, en·thrall·ing, en·thralls
1. To hold spellbound; captivate: The magic show enthralled the audience.

2. To enslave.
 "Crocodile Tears" project, 1971-1997, hilarious and strange, call out for a much needed retrospective of that artist's work. The art, despite the slavish slav·ish  
adj.
1. Of or characteristic of a slave or slavery; servile: Her slavish devotion to her job ruled her life.

2.
 installation, reminds one of how Gablik stressed Magritte's elusiveness rather than his success when she wrote: "Bizarre ... anxious ... and rarely satisfied with himself, he looks more impulsively at the stars than at the price of candles."
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Title Annotation:Michael Govan, Stephanie Barron, and John Baldessari
Author:Hainley, Bruce
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2007
Words:605
Previous Article:Linda Geary: Rena Bransten Gallery.
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