Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,569,808 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

"Yvonne Rainer: Radical Juxtapositions 1961-2002"; Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE).


In its Los Angeles incarnation, Yvonne Rainer's traveling retrospective lived up to its name by virtue of its very location: Audiences experienced the "radical juxtaposition" of a nonprofit space situated on Hollywood Boulevard. Dimmed and functionally outfitted with video monitors playing footage of Rainer's choreography and films, and interspersed with vitrines containing performance-related ephemera e·phem·er·a  
n.
A plural of ephemeron.


ephemera
Noun, pl

items designed to last only for a short time, such as programmes or posters

Noun 1.
, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions or LACE is an art exhibition space in Los Angeles, California which was founded in 1978.

Beginning in the middle of the 1970s, artists started living in downtown Los Angeles in large, low-cost loft spaces, and LACE was located in
 (LACE) seemed worlds apart from the hype and glare of the street outside. And yet the disjuncture dis·junc·ture  
n.
Disjunction; disunion; separation.

Noun 1. disjuncture - state of being disconnected
disconnectedness, disconnection, disjunction

separation - the state of lacking unity
 fortuitously reminded us that mass culture vividly shaped the imaginative possibilities of Rainer's practice. As art historian Carrie Lambert convincingly argues in a catalogue essay, the landscape of media is one that Rainer has both opposed and very fruitfully engaged. "No to spectacle no to virtuosity no to transformations and magic and make-believe," the artist once famously declared.

Organized by Sid Sachs for the Rosen-wald-Wolf gallery at the University of the Arts University of the Arts may refer to:
  • University of the Arts Bremen in Bremen, Germany
  • University of the Arts London in London, England
  • University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
 in Philadelphia, the exhibition moves from Rainer's work as a founding member of the Judson Dance Theater Judson Dance Theater located at the Judson Memorial Church, New York the group of artists that formed Judson Dance Theater are considered the founders of Postmodern dance. The theater grew out of a dance composition class taught by Robert Dunn, a musician who had studied with John  through her more recent films. This trajectory makes clear that Rainer takes seriously the question of communication, in its various social forms, because it profoundly impacts our everyday relationships and emotional lives. In her art, she strives to make private stories matter publicly, whether they were first told in unceremonious conversations between domestic partners or on the psychoanalyst's couch. Conversely, she examines the personal impact of collective experiences of gender, race, poverty, and war. Such traversing of public and private experience is amplified by her affinity for nonlinear formal strategies, which encourage us to shift back and forth between different narrative levels.

In part, the exhibition underscored this complex negotiation by demonstrating that the artist's early desire to expand the kinds of communication feasible in the public setting of the theater was shadowed by the often practical impulse to publicize, record, and otherwise supplement her work through text, photography, and film. To radicalize rad·i·cal·ize  
tr.v. rad·i·cal·ized, rad·i·cal·iz·ing, rad·i·cal·iz·es
To make radical or more radical: "Many, probably most, of those have been radicalized by their experiences among the poor" 
 the encounter between the dancer and audience, Rainer renounced virtuoso performance in favor of ordinary, unembellished, and sometimes improvised movement, witnessed here in footage and vintage stills of dances such as Three Satie Spoons, 1961, and Continuous Project--Altered Daily, 1969. She countered the histrionics of traditional dance by performing in street clothes and refusing to look the audience in the eye. Given the reputed deadpan demeanor of Rainer's dancing, we might expect it to appear tedious or commonplace. To the contrary, Trio A, 1966, danced by Rainer and captured on film in 1978, is strangely, earthily graceful.

If Rainer's dance was intrinsically tied to the immediacy of the encounter with her audience, its reception relied equally on the documentation--posters, mimeographed flyers, programs, and magazine articles--that both preceded and preserved that encounter. This publicity material, framed on LACE's walls and crowded into vitrines, manifests a DIY DIY
abbr.
do-it-yourself


DIY or d.i.y. Brit, Austral & NZ do-it-yourself
DIY
abbr DIY
do it yourself a DIY shop/job.
 quality and illuminates, something of the radical intellectual milieu in which Rainer's work was distributed via alternative publications and venues founded to democratize de·moc·ra·tize  
tr.v. de·moc·ra·tized, de·moc·ra·tiz·ing, de·moc·ra·tiz·es
To make democratic.



de·moc
 the elitist e·lit·ism or é·lit·ism  
n.
1. The belief that certain persons or members of certain classes or groups deserve favored treatment by virtue of their perceived superiority, as in intellect, social status, or financial resources.
 institutions of the art world. The materials also point to how language--scribbled, spoken, and even, in the case of Film About a Woman Who ..., 1974, adhered directly onto the artist's face--functions as a pivotal part of Rainer's working process. Exemplary in this regard is "Kristina (For a ... Opera)," a spread that Rainer published in the German magazine Interfunktionen in 1975. The thirty-page project, executed in collaboration with then-editor Benjamin Buchloh, illustrates how her paratactic par·a·tax·is  
n.
The juxtaposition of clauses or phrases without the use of coordinating or subordinating conjunctions, as It was cold; the snows came.
 experiments with typography and image were inspired by the conventions and materiality of the printed page. Part concrete poetry, part screenplay, and part photo-essay, the article manipulates such factors as margins, spacing, and justification to alternately enhance or disrupt the narrative flow. For Rainer, the page seems to have its own kinesthetics, its own tempo, its own repertory of movement and stillness.

In a 1972 interview in Avalanche, Rainer discussed her midcareer shift from dance to film. She attributed this conversion to the relative durability of the latter medium, explaining that while she loved the ephemerality of dance, such impermanence im·per·ma·nent  
adj.
Not lasting or durable; not permanent.



im·perma·nence, im·per
 also entailed sadness and loss--feelings echoed in the inevitable experience of the dancer's body growing older. However, if her films were more ontologically secure than her dances, they proved just as volatile semantically. For example, Journeys From Berlin/1971, 1980, consists of a fragmented interweaving of surrealistic sur·re·al·is·tic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to surrealism.

2. Having an oddly dreamlike or unreal quality.



sur·re
 scenes from pre-revolutionary Russia, haunting allusions to the Baader-Meinhof gang, and monologues from an individual's psychotherapy sessions (in which the patient is played by Annette Michelson). The effect is a highly unstable yet eloquent meditation on the connections between concrete experiences with violence and more abstract global, institutional ones.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Rainer learned to embrace indeterminacy in·de·ter·mi·na·cy  
n.
The state or quality of being indeterminate.

Noun 1. indeterminacy - the quality of being vague and poorly defined
indefiniteness, indefinity, indeterminateness, indetermination
 early on, in Robert Dunn's Cage-inspired workshops, which she attended at Merce Cunningham's studio; and it is essential to Rainer's understanding that an artwork cannot be assessed outside of the particular circumstances in which it is elaborated or witnessed, as when she performed Trio A as Convalescent con·va·les·cent
adj.
Relating to convalescence.

n.
A person who is recovering from an illness, an injury, or a surgical operation.



convalescent

1. pertaining to or characterized by convalescence.

2.
 Dance in 1967 while recovering from a serious illness, or Trio A with Flags, 1970, in protest of the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. . In these instances, dance does not give ultimate form to a choreographic notation but insists on its meaning as unfinished and ongoing, open to any number of subsequent interpretations and permutations. The notion of indeterminacy also seems key to Rainer's well-known refusal to instrumentalize the political efficacy of her art--not because she doesn't care about the social consequences of her work, but because the attempt to reach an audience is both undermined and enriched by the separation between the lived instant and the representational medium. It is in that distance, or rather, in the relay across it, that Rainer's communication takes place. Finally, it is in this sense that the current exhibition succeeds, attesting to Rainer's significance without providing a definitive reading of her work, ensuring that the pleasures of its deciphering will live on.

"Radical Juxtapositions" is on view at the Haggerty Museum of Art, Marquette University, Milwaukee, through January 9.

Gwen Allen is visiting assistant professor of art history at Maine College of Art The Maine College of Art (MECA) is a fully accredited, degree-granting art college in the city of Portland, Maine. Founded in 1882, it is the oldest arts educational institution in Maine, and is not associated with any larger academic or arts institutions. .
COPYRIGHT 2005 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Allen, Gwen
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2005
Words:998
Previous Article:Sturtevant: Museum fur Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt.
Next Article:On Kawara: David Zwirner.
Topics:



Related Articles
Subject index.
Karel Nel: Status of Dust.
Summer 2004: three times a year Artforum looks ahead to the coming season. The following survey previews fifty shows opening around the world between...
Fall 2004 preview: three times a year Artforum looks ahead to the coming season. The following survey previews fifty shows opening around the world...
"Regarding Terror: the RAF Exhibition"; KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin.
"Open Systems": Tate Modern.
David Armando Guerra: Belleza Y Felicidad.
Plato's cave.
Diary.
Three times a year Artforum looks ahead to the coming season. The following survey previews fifty shows opening around the world between January and...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles