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"Make It Now": SculptureCenter.


SculptureCenter's "Make It Now: New Sculpture in New York" arrived hot on the heels of two other exhibitions that purported to clue us in about the country's two big art scenes: P.S. I Contemporary Art Center's bloated "Greater New York 2005" and the UCLA Hammer Museum's "THING: New Sculpture from Los Angeles." While hardly perfect, "Make It Now" outdid its predecessors in one unexpected way: It plotted clear connections between the substance of local art and the environment in which it's made. From Ester Partegas's tarp-covered, boarded-off Monument to the Truth, 2005, in the center's yard, which echoed adjacent condo developments, to Bryan Savitz's Submissive Compressions, 2005, a set of fanciful cityscapes made of discarded fruit and vegetable cartons--that is to say, from witty conceptualism conceptualism, in philosophy, position taken on the problem of universals, initially by Peter Abelard in the 12th cent. Like nominalism it denied that universals exist independently of the mind, but it held that universals have an existence in the mind as concept. These concepts are not arbitrary inventions but are reflections of similarities among particular things themselves, e.g., the concept male reflects a similarity between Paul and John. to BFA-grade monkeying-around--the show's concern with a recrudescence
recru·desce v.
recru·descent adj.
 of form and tradition fell away in favor of a portrait of New York as an actual place rather than as a mere node in a global system.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In a way, SculptureCenter made the perfect site for such a show. Located next to an auto-repair shop in Queens, the building is a former trolley-repair shop last used as a factory for roll-down steel doors. The building's towering brick and metal interior--along with the narrow corridors of its basement--invoke the postindustrial spaces that have housed the New York art scene for forty-odd years, and the sooty, scavenged air native to such settings helped to unite disparate modes of production: Fritz Welch's intricate progression of forms and processes rendered in iodine, wire, dust, glitter, fabric, found grafitti-sprayed wood paneling, and more; Seth Price's hostage-execution images, downloaded from the Internet and silk-screened onto crumpled clear polyester film; SOL'SAX's life-size, clothed ceramic-and-wire figures of African Americans, with the gangsta and the glamorous alike hung unnervingly upside down. Given the cheap materials used in so many of the works and the strong presence of black artists, "Make It" dared imply that being "now" in New York might just mean being broke and even nonwhite. There's a rebuke to Chelsea in there somewhere.

Unfortunately, the show inadvertently highlighted one advantage of the gallery district's formal showrooms: The venue's big open shell can be hostile to a multi-artist display. Despite relatively ample space, the works in the exhibition felt crammed together. Like a shower in the kitchen, this discord may have been an apt theatricalization of the scarcity of New York square footage, but it often served individual pieces poorly: Price's works, for example, were easily ignored; and Nicole Cherubini's god-ugly furred and bejeweled glazed urns might have been more engaging had their placement near the door not made them seem more like obstacles than artworks.

A pairing of works downstairs formed a kind of pendant whereby "Make It Now" made the most of the bohemian visions of youth. During my last visit to the show, Nancy Hwang was performing: lying cosily in bed with a stranger who'd answered an ad in the Village Voice, red-stained wine glasses within arms' reach. Perhaps the piece is silly, but the pair's hushed patter gave the must and dust a welcome human spark. Meanwhile, a nearby video documented an action by Klara Hobza in which she installed bright lights in the museum's clerestory clerestory or clearstory (both: klĭr`stōr'ē, –stôr'ē), a part of a building whose walls rise higher than the roofs of adjoining parts of the structure. Pierced by windows, it is chiefly a device for obtaining extra light. and flashed them on and off in Morse code A character code invented by Samuel Morse that is represented by the duration of a single tone. Written as dots, dashes and spaces, the first Morse code message was sent in 1844 over a newly constructed telegraph line between Baltimore and Washington. It was also used in World War II for signaling with flashes of light. A variation of Morse's original code was made by Friedrich Gerke in 1848, which evolved into the International Morse Code that is still in use. sequences. Filmed in part from passing subway cars, cutting to close-ups of a goggle-wearing Hobza manhandling an archaic switching device, it's a deceptively smart work that binds together the erotics of silent communication, a love of '70s Conceptual art both self-conscious and genuine, and a love of New York. It's also smart enough to make this last romance seem legit--the kind of work that even in 2005 the city still deserves.
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Author:Ammirati, Domenick
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:619
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