"Yard".SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK Socrates Sculpture Park is located in the neighborhood Long Island City, Queens (New York City, USA) at the intersection of Broadway and Vernon Boulevard. It was created in 1986 by American sculptor Mark di Suvero on former landfill. Robert Smithson was one of the first artists to think about suburbia in geological terms. His insight that the structure of the suburban landscape is inherently crystalline--the result of mineral processes unfolding at the limits of human perception--remains a relevant counterpoint to the sociohistorical narrative that's much more often used to understand the sprawl that surrounds our cities. Defining suburbia as a synthesis of the urban and the pastoral--as a kind of intermediary condition dependent on antecedent forms of manmade landscape--leads artists into familiar postmodern terrain, where they deploy historical references and ironic juxtapositions in an attempt to reveal unrecognized or underlying meanings. But while this methodology has gotten a workout over the last three decades--Sculpture in the Environment (S.I.T.E.) started skinning suburban cliches back in the '70s--it skirts Smithson's essential question: What is this place we call "suburbia," and why have its particular physical qualities proven both inevitable and alienating? In "Yard," a group show of outdoor sculpture at the Socrates Sculpture Park in Queens, artists (with perhaps a few exceptions) preferred the sociohistorical framework as a means to express their ambivalence toward the suburban experience. Jason Middlebrook installed garden gnomes Gnomes The 15-year pass-through securities offered under Freddie Mac's cash program. Notes: Investors sell their mortgages through Freddie Mac's cash program. The 15-year mortgages sold to Freddie Mac form the pool of mortgages that back the securities referred to as sprouting out of an irregular tumulus tumulus (t `myələs), plural tumuli (–lī), in archaeology, a heap of earth or stones placed over a grave. , inviting us to wonder just what might be buried underneath. Elise Ferguson mined a similar vein with a long retaining wall covered in handmade urethane urethane (yoor´ithān´),n ethyl carbamate used as an anesthetic agent for laboratory animals, formerly used as a hypnotic in humans. tiles that aped the linoleum that covers far ton many suburban kitchen floors. While the deft material inversion drove home the installation's artificiality, the work produced only a flurry of connotative impressions that failed to coalesce into any kind of distinctive effect. Adam Cvijanovic's New City, 2001-2003, wore its intentions on its sleeve: Mounted on a wooden armature armature, in art: see sculpture. Armature That part of an electric rotating machine which includes the main current-carrying winding. was a giant ink-jet print of a typical suburban development under construction. Behind the backdroplike panels, actual urban housing projects were visible in the distance. Point taken. Other artists in the show re created pools, sandboxes (for dogs only), and a cedar deck. The most striking piece in "Yard" was Alyson Shotz's mirror-acrylic picket fence. It slipped through a thin copse of cottonwood trees and tall grasses, neatly dividing a portion of the park. While clearly visible from a distance or when observed obliquely, the slats disintegrated as one approached, melting into doubled foliage. Although it relied, like many of the other works, on the easy subversion of a common suburban trope trope n. 1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor. 2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies. , the fence had material (or perhaps immaterial) presence enough to generate a distinctive sculptural energy, becoming all the more real as it slid away from optical certainty. If Shotz's polished surfaces hinted at mineral underpinnings, the German artists Venske & Spanle made the association explicit. Having re-created a patch of suburban lawn aim driveway, they--in a simple chthonic chthon·ic also chtho·ni·an adj. Greek Mythology Of or relating to the underworld. [From Greek khthonios, of the earth, from khth gesture--tilted a chunk of it a few degrees ailing a horizontal axis, revealing it as a massive concrete slab with a bit of plastic green stuff glued to its surface. This brings us back to Smithson and the notion that despite its organic veneer, suburbia remains a hard, impenetrable lattice work, the product of forces moving in unfamiliar time. For while the yard--in the context of this particular show and throughout American culture--often serves as a proxy for the 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. space of middle-class childhood, it remains a real space bounded by rock, metal, and asphalt. Smithson and Earth artists like Michael Heizer often managed to exploit the inherent impenetrability im·pen·e·tra·bil·i·ty n. 1. The quality or condition of being impenetrable. 2. The inability of two bodies to occupy the same space at the same time. Noun 1. of geological form and scale to define a sort of limit function of human understanding. None of the artists in "Yard" have used the suburban topos to·pos n. pl. to·poi A traditional theme or motif; a literary convention. [Greek, short for (koinos) topos, (common)place.] Noun 1. to achieve anything quite so profound--hardly a failing but still an opportunity missed. |
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