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"The Naturalist Gathers." (exhibit at Steingladstone, New York, New York) (Review)


In its arrangement of images that span the history of art, and film stills, book illustrations, postcards, and advertisements, "The Naturalist Gathers" presented a genealogy of the process of collecting, ordering, and observing. Devoid of "original" artworks, this fabric of pictures portrayed the world as a chain of mediated representations, illuminating how we organize experience and construct an "archaeology of knowledge." Composed of materials from curator Douglas Blau's own collection, this picture gallery within a gallery became something akin to an encyclopedic en·cy·clo·pe·dic  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of an encyclopedia.

2. Embracing many subjects; comprehensive: "an ignorance almost as encyclopedic as his erudition" 
 vanitas
This article is about the fine art genre. For the pejorative name for the political party, see Veritas (political party)


In the arts, vanitas
, filled with images of libraries, museums, archives, and still lifes. It evoked the mystical materialism of Walter Benjamin's essay, "Unpacking My Library," 1931, in which he designates collectors as the "physiognomists of the world of objects," and suggests that a collection is not merely an inventory but more significantly a place where, through the individual's absorption in the object as a magic fetish fetish (fĕt`ĭsh), inanimate object believed to possess some magical power. The fetish may be a natural thing, such as a stone, a feather, a shell, or the claw of an animal, or it may be artificial, such as carvings in wood.  of memory, history might be "unpacked."

"The Naturalist Gathers" asked that we relinquish our stubborn attachment to distinguishing between the original and its reproduction, between art-historical material and popular culture. Since a collection is also always a study in display tactics, the emphasis here was upon a nonhierarchical survey of the phenomenal world's self-representations, evidenced by Blau's skillful skill·ful  
adj.
1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
 yet radical 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.  juxtapositions. Installed in two rooms, each with a somewhat distinct thematic resonance, the hundreds of images were uniformly outfitted in simple black frames and hung in narrow, salon-style bands of pictorial information that wrapped around the walls.

The main installation opened with a reproduction of Charles Wilson For other persons of the same name, see Wilson (surname).

Charles Wilson may refer to:
Politicians
  • Charlie Wilson (Ohio politician) (born 1943), U.S.
 Peale's The Artist in His Museum, 1822, beckoning the viewer into the fictive fic·tive  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or able to engage in imaginative invention.

2. Of, relating to, or being fiction; fictional.

3. Not genuine; sham.
 realm of his collection, and by extension, into the exhibition itself. Proceeding clockwise around this multifaceted panorama of pictures, a subtle logic--a unique kind of visual intertextuality--emerged. Carpaccio's Saint Jerome, ca. 1502, a still from the '60s science-fiction film Fantastic Voyage, 1966, a magazine photo of scientists pondering objects (undoubtedly lifted from a National Geographic), and a well-known shot of Marcel Duchamp engrossed en·gross  
tr.v. en·grossed, en·gross·ing, en·gross·es
1. To occupy exclusively; absorb: A great novel engrosses the reader. See Synonyms at monopolize.

2.
 in a game of chess, all occupied the same domain because they described related object-oriented activities. Further on, we encountered a Thomas Struth photo of museum-goers near an image of people in the dinosaur hall of a natural history museum, while a picture of Andre Malraux in his "Imaginary Museum" lurked nearby. At this point, pictures of archives, libraries, World's Fair Pavilions, Exposition Halls--including a Fred Wilson counter-ethnology museum display--and small commercial venues like apothecaries began to supersede To obliterate, replace, make void, or useless.

Supersede means to take the place of, as by reason of superior worth or right. A recently enacted statute that repeals an older law is said to supersede the prior legislation.
 representations of individuals or groups. Finally, we reentered more privatized domains of collection and study, in which a Mark Dion eco-crisis work station, a shot of Freud's study, an image of the Sir John Soanes Museum, among other room-sized still lifes (or rooms as still lifes), interacted. Upstairs, a smaller installation focused upon myriad permutations of the still life, mixing images from sacred and profane sources. "The Naturalist Gathers" reconstructed both history and the present as a collection of representational fragments that reverberated against one another, mirroring our rituals of looking and ordering.
COPYRIGHT 1993 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1993, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Decter, Joshua
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 1993
Words:501
Previous Article:Lois Conner. (exhibit at the Laurence Miller Gallery, New York, New York) (Reviews)
Next Article:Deborah Kass. (exhibit at the Fiction/Nonfiction, New York, New York) (Review)
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