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"Sculpture Projects in Munster." (art exhibit)


When Tony Smith famously attempted in 1966 to come to terms with the radical changes imminent in sculptural production and perception, he pointed to two seemingly unrelated examples of highly overdetermined Overdetermined can refer to
  • Overdetermined systems in various branches of mathematics
  • Overdetermination in various fields of psychology or analytical thought
 social spaces: one a site of the future, a strip of the then-unfinished New Jersey Turnpike, the other a ruin of recent history, the infamous Nurnberg Stadium built by the Nazi government for its Reichsparteitag. What linked the two in Smith's statement was - we realize in hindsight - the recognition of a crucial moment in the transformation of public space. New technologies of mass organization and transportation altered the conventions of spatial perception and generated radically different forms of social space: on the one hand a totalitarian public sphere in both its fascist and state-socialist formations, on the other, a systematically planned and enforced capitalist consumer culture in the Western countries, which altered public perception in a manner easily matching, despite its fundamental differences, the intensity of the changes brought about by the totalitarian models. The recently united Germany has of course its manifest historical and contemporary share of all three spheres - fascist, state socialist, and consumerist - and one might have imagined that the painful evidence everywhere of this condition would offer the ideal circumstances for sculptural reflection on German territory in the late '90s.

Judging by their entries, most of the seventy-seven sculptors in this third installment of "Sculpture Projects in Munster" thought about neither Nurnberg nor New Jersey. Instead, it seems, they understood the exhibition to be primarily situated in the simultaneous collective practices of enforced leisure permeating the now-defunct social spaces of public communication. Despite curators Kasper Konig and Klaus Bussmann's best efforts to address the increasingly evident contradictions in sculpture, be they physical, discursive, or institutional, the general inability - not least among sculptors - to theorize the·o·rize  
v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es

v.intr.
To formulate theories or a theory; speculate.

v.tr.
To propose a theory about.
 the meaning of "public space" at the end of the century appears to render these contradictions insurmountable. (This terminological crisis is of course only the epiphenomenon epiphenomenon /epi·phe·nom·e·non/ (ep?i-fe-nom´e-non) an accessory, exceptional, or accidental occurrence in the course of any disease.

ep·i·phe·nom·e·non
n.
 of a much deeper one in the understanding of the conditions of the public sphere and dependent conditions of simultaneous, collective reception that have, after all, been the ideal to which sculpture aspired since its foundation in religious and secular monuments.) This analysis would constitute one model of theorizing sculpture's epistemic ep·i·ste·mic  
adj.
Of, relating to, or involving knowledge; cognitive.



[From Greek epistm
 contradictions at the end of the century.

"Sculpture Projects in Munster" gives ample evidence of the fate of contemporary sculpture once the ideological state apparatus has shut the door on sociopolitical so·ci·o·po·li·ti·cal  
adj.
Involving both social and political factors.


sociopolitical
Adjective

of or involving political and social factors
 reflection, much less practice. Begun as an appendix to a survey of twentieth-century sculpture in 1977 (a moment when the adamant reception of Minimal and post-Minimal sculpture in Germany seemed to promise a revival in the medium), renewed in 1987 and again this summer, the show has come to reflect the production of art as an advanced form of entertainment for an ever-more sophisticated and increasingly bored European middle class, which would not know where to turn without blockbuster exhibitions (a condition necessitated through an overdeveloped cultural infrastructure, with its myriad corporate-, state-, and community-supported exhibition institutions, corporate and private investment collections, and ambitious curators who fancy themselves nomads, meaning they race from city to city in service of the multinational monopoly of the culture industry). These artists seem to take as a given that the function of sculpture is to furnish these compensatory leisure spaces. In Munster - the epitome of a deeply complacent middle-class city - any number of examples can be found: Ilya Kabakov's radio tower, Fischli and Weiss' outdoor garden, Jorge Pardo's pier extending into the Lake Aasee, Bert Theis' "platform for philosophical discussion," and worst of all, in their mix of banality and pretense, the supposedly therapeutic devices of Marie-Ange Guilleminot.

The rare exception here are those projects that explicitly reflect on the conditions leisure compensates for, projects that make the structural parallel between the outdoor exhibition and amusement park manifest in their conception. Gabriel Orozco's Ferris Wheel Half Sunk into the Earth (an installation that, for lack of funds, unfortunately could not be realized), Dan Graham's Fun House for Minster, and Hans Haacke's Standort Merry-go Round - three of the best works in the show - all shared a relative trust in the by-now problematic definition of site-specificity, inasmuch as they offered a rather uncanny analogy to the perceptual experience of large-scale kinetic and specular spec·u·lar  
adj.
Of, resembling, or produced by a mirror or speculum.



specu·lar·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
 structures in a fun-fair environment by way of a response to the specific conditions of the exhibition's "publicness." But beyond a shared skepticism concerning the universal legibility of a contribution to the project, each work introduced a dialectical element against the easy assimilation of sculpture to leisure-time accoutrements ac·cou·ter·ment or ac·cou·tre·ment  
n.
1. An accessory item of equipment or dress. Often used in the plural.

2. Military equipment other than uniforms and weapons. Often used in the plural.

3.
. In Graham's almost neoclassically elegant pavilion, the architecture of amusement (the mirrored "fun house") was deployed to provide spectators the opportunity of observing themselves being constituted within a seemingly infinite play of differentiation and interrelation, social and spatial interaction. And while we are by now generally aware of the fallacies and transhistorical An entity or concept is transhistorical if it holds throughout human history, not merely within the frame of reference of a particular form of society at a particular stage of historical development.  claims of a purely phenomenological subject, Graham's work convincingly continues the critical reflexivity of late Modernist art from the '60s, when the phenomenological legacy could still serve as the foundation for a radical emancipatory e·man·ci·pate  
tr.v. e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing, e·man·ci·pates
1. To free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberate.

2.
 project of subjectivity (it thus comes as no surprise that the suddenly apparent neoclassical ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism  
n.
A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially:
a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form,
 dimensions of the work remind us of revolutionary architecture). By contrast, Haacke, in his definition of subjectivity, remains steadfast in his commitment to historicization The principle of 'historicizaton' is a fundamental part of the aesthetic developed by the German modernist theatre practitioner Bertolt Brecht.

In his poem "Speech to Danish working-class actors on the art of observation", Brecht offers a vivid portrait of the attitude he
. More than anyone else, he is at home in thinking about Germany's different public spheres and, in fact, still seems to be trying to come to terms in his recent work with the implications of the belated reconstitution of that fateful nation-state. After discovering in Munster an eerie cylindrical war memorial from 1909 whose figure frieze wraps around the monument like the wooden horses on a merry-go-round, he installed next to it an actual children's carousel, concealed in a wooden lattice cylinder. Hearing the tinny tin·ny  
adj. tin·ni·er, tin·ni·est
1. Of, containing, or yielding tin.

2. Tasting or smelling of tin: tinny canned food.

3.
 organ endlessly grind out an accelerated version of the German national anthem and peeking through the wooden cage to observe the empty rotating carousel, one walked away increasingly convinced of the analogous bankruptcy of nation-states and monuments.

One of Alighiero e Boetti's last works, originally installed in Sonsbeek just before his death, brought the bankruptcy of the monumental tradition to a tragicomic climax: citing the inadvertantly absurd convention of Socialist Realist sculptural depictions of heroes in suits and fusing it with arte povera's inimitable sense of primary matter, Boetti presented a self-portrait in bronze of a figure who watered himself with a heroically upheld garden hose, emitting clouds of steam around his electrically heated head. This grand farce, however, was a rare achievement, and other artists attempting to be humorous did not fare so well. The Warholian dilemma of wishing to comply with (culture) industry standards and yet maintain the avant-garde gesture of refusal to deliver meaning to the apparatus of domination with which culture is inextricably in·ex·tri·ca·ble  
adj.
1.
a. So intricate or entangled as to make escape impossible: an inextricable maze; an inextricable web of deceit.

b.
 intertwined seems - with a certain delay - to have caught up with France. Its most exemplary exponents in Munster were Daniel Buren and Fabrice Hybert. The former repeats twice: first, a work (another fun-fair decoration, in fact) already successfully installed at Documenta VII in 1982, and second, a local convention of street decoration (featuring hanging pennants) during carnival. And as was the case with Hybert's prizewinning prize·win·ning also prize-win·ning  
adj.
Having won or worthy of winning a prize: the prizewinning entry.

Adj. 1.
 pavilion in Venice, his idea of equipping the exhibition's curators and employees with beepers that emit flashing colored lights makes one want to give up on the art world altogether and go to work in a real industry, like rap music (which is paradoxically more involved with and implicated im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 in the real than any of the art-world frivolities of the French fin de siecle Fin` de sie´cle

1. Lit., end of the century; - mostly used adjectively in English to signify: belonging to, or characteristic of, the close of the 19th century.
).

A second model of theorizing the epistemic difficulties of sculpture would be to differentiate the three frameworks or the three institutional and discursive spaces governing its production and perception: the museum, the sphere of spectacle culture (the "media"), and the anomic anomic /ano·mic/ (ah-no´mik) lacking a name.

a·no·mic
adj.
Socially unstable, alienated, and disorganized.

n.
A socially unstable, alienated person.
 agglomerations of traffic, residential and business architecture, and advertisement haphazardly called "public space." It is considerably discomforting to confront the work of several dozen sculptors who - in their eagerness to position a sculptural product in this city of abundant spatial amenities, amenities that offer a mirage of exemption from the totalizing regimes of production and consumption - have not reflected even in passing on a single one of these frameworks, let alone their complicated interaction. And if some tried, as in Turkish artist Ayse Erkmen's clever project of removing a sculpture from the museum's vaults, transporting it by helicopter over the city, and depositing it away from view on the museum's roof, the work spectacularized the dilemma rather than systematically analyzing these frameworks and the historical origins of sculpture's contradictions. Of course, there were exceptional projects that did offer such a reflection while manifestly refusing the lure of Munster's arcadian deceptions. One outstanding example was Maria Eichhorn's clear-cut and functional proposition analyzing public space as private property. The project "simply" went through the complex operation of acquiring a plot of land from the city for the duration of the show. The means for buying the land were supplied by the exhibition's production budget, and the resale of the plot to the city after the conclusion of the show will generate the funds to support a local tenants' association that struggles to protect low-income housing from ubiquitous gentrifiers and speculators.

Another exception, though in a different direction entirely, was Thomas Hirschhorn's remarkable Precarious Construction, referred to also as a "Sculpture Sorting Station," in which the work plays through all of sculpture's registers and its parallel discourses that determine our present experience of objects and matter (e.g., trophies, commercial logos, media representations of sculpture such as a videotape of work by Otto Freundlich). The handcrafted hand·craft  
n.
Variant of handicraft.

tr.v. hand·craft·ed, hand·craft·ing, hand·crafts
To fashion or make by hand.



hand·craft
, thrifty, and vulnerable eccentricity of its materials (e.g., aluminum foil wrapped around cardboard cores, even the shaky "pavilion" housing the work itself, constructed from board, plastic, and paper and containing video monitors as much as the "sculptures" themselves) not only generated a condition of temporariness and ephemerality that is seemingly a requisite for sculpture that credibly reflects on its condition of crisis but also constructed a melancholic mel·an·chol·ic
adj.
1. Affected with or being subject to melancholy.

2. Of or relating to melancholia.
 stage to contemplate sculpture's lost possibilities and the medium's current forms of individually motivated opposition.

A third theoretical proposition would be to consider the paradigms of sculpture in their multifaceted transition from an underlying aesthetic of (heroic) industrial production to an aesthetic of archives and statistical administration, and more recently, one of mere representation (spectacle in the guise of fashion and entertainment) that is seemingly becoming the hallmark of the '90s. Not one of these underlying paradigms is in and of itself superior or inferior to any other (a seemingly incurable problem for artists like Richard Deacon, Richard Serra, or Ulrich Ruckriem, who remain fanatically convinced of the superiority of a paradigm of production that is paradoxically legitimated by the institutional authority of the museum). Needless to say, the most complex and confusing oscillations oscillations See Cortical oscillations.  between these paradigmatic See paradigm.  formations (which were already in place in the '20s) are more likely to communicate the difficulties of sculpture in the present than a puristic pur·ist  
n.
One who practices or urges strict correctness, especially in the use of words.



pu·ristic adj.
 and insistent articulation of a single paradigm. Undoubtedly, one of the extraordinary features of Carl Andre's work in the late '60s was to have subjected sculpture, as a mirage of industrial production, to the rigorous gridding of mechanical and scientific ordering systems; that he would now suggest a project for Munster in which he would collect garbage with residents bespeaks not only his genius at modifying paradigms but also perhaps his projection of what seemed urgent from New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 onto a middle-size, middle-class German city where compulsive cleanliness is the order of the day.

Four works articulated brilliantly what hybrid conceptions of sculpture partaking in all the above paradigms can achieve. First of all is Mark Dion's strangely poetic diorama (and its related drawings in the museum) of a bear in a park, an installation that opened a broad spectrum of reflections, ranging from sculpture as a tamed substitute to the (specifically German?) persistence of mythical thought in the guise of affection for animals in the face of ecological destruction. Second, the young, relatively unknown Russian artist Svetlana Kopystiansky's surprising installation of innumerable black and white photocopied posters pasted up like illicit advertisements throughout the city revealed the degree to which public life, even in a clean, green city, is thoroughly permeated by media culture. Paradoxically, the objects represented in this clandestine campaign were unidentifiable Adj. 1. unidentifiable - impossible to identify
identifiable - capable of being identified
, volumetric volumetric /vol·u·met·ric/ (vol?u-met´rik) pertaining to or accompanied by measurement in volumes.

vol·u·met·ric
adj.
Of or relating to measurement by volume.
 objects made from debris - involuntary sculptures. They resemble traces of an almost compulsive physiological yearning to model matter and objects in terms other than those prescribed by the reigning universe of commodity production.

A third example is the growing metaphorical complexity of Michael Asher's Caravan, which was part of the 1977 and 1987 installments of "Sculpture Projects in Munster" as well. Changing its location throughout the city weekly, the trailer-as-readymade-sculpture, as a hybrid between industrial product and consumer object, hovers between the museum and the spaces of leisure and consumption. In its eggshell travesty of public space, it denounces the insidious dimension of secluded and enforced privacy that governs those spaces. One could also recognize the extraordinary importance of Asher's project in retrospect by comparison with the embarrassing one-liners Andrea Zittel and Joop van Lieshout contributed to Munster, artists who seem to assume that, if only sufficiently asseverated, one could forge a new paradigm New Paradigm

In the investing world, a totally new way of doing things that has a huge effect on business.

Notes:
The word "paradigm" is defined as a pattern or model, and it has been used in science to refer to a theoretical framework.
 for sculptural production from the inanity in·an·i·ty  
n. pl. in·an·i·ties
1. The condition or quality of being inane.

2. Something empty of meaning or sense.

Noun 1.
 of the conditions Asher's work annihilated twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 ago.

A final example is of Lawrence Weiner's by now almost inevitably magisterial 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.
 work. For Munster he installed two steel plates, commonly used in road construction, which bore an English inscription and its German translation dye-cut into the steel surface; set on a busy corner, the words could be easily read by pedestrians crossing the street. The ambiguous text, "Dry Earth & Scattered Ashes or Dry Earth & Buried Gold or," its horizontal position horizontal position,
n a posture in which the body lies flat and the feet and head remain on the same level. Also called
supine.
 and negative, cutout cut·out  
n.
1. Something cut out or intended to be cut out from something else.

2. Electricity A device that interrupts, bypasses, or disconnects a circuit or circuit element.

3.
 lettering giving insight into the burial void beneath the plates, ignited a flash of recognition of "public" sculpture's continuing mnemonic Pronounced "ni-mon-ic." A memory aid. In programming, it is a name assigned to a machine function. For example, COM1 is the mnemonic assigned to serial port #1 on a PC. Programming languages are almost entirely mnemonics.  functions - a sudden if only perfunctory perforation per·fo·ra·tion
n.
1. The act of perforating or the state of being perforated.

2. An abnormal opening in a hollow organ or viscus, as one made by rupture or injury.


Perforation
A hole.
 of a collectively and publically maintained repression. Yet, as always in Weiner's work, what was presented was above all a model of language as sculpture. It proposed that sculpture must pass beyond the heroicism of steel-plate production, beyond the false claims of collectively shared public space (all "public" space at this point being privately owned or permeated by totalizing, instrumentalizing private interests of profit maximization), in order to produce if not the solely possible articulation of intersubjectivity Intersubjectivity is something which is shared by two or more subjectivites.

The term is used in three ways.
  1. Firstly, in its weakest sense it is used to refer to agreement.
, social collectivity, and phenomenological self-constitution, then at least its most authentic version - that is, sculpture defined within the system of language itself.

Benjamin H. D. Buchloh Benjamin H. D. Buchloh is the Franklin D. and Florence Rosenblatt Professor of Modern Art at Harvard University.

He is currently a co-editor of the journal October.
 is professor of art history at Barnard College, Columbia University. His collection of essays, Open Book, will be published by MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  Press in 1998.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Buchloh, Benjamin H. D.
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Sep 1, 1997
Words:2463
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