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Al Hansen: Andrea Rosen Gallery.


"I am not at all interested in having a retrospective exhibition of my work," artist Al Hansen (1927-1995) wrote toward the end of his life, adding that such a show "would take up at least an airplane hangar or two." Putting together an overview of the innumerable assemblages, collages, paintings, and other objects that Hansen produced over the course of his lengthy career would indeed be a daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 task. But poignantly if implicitly absent from Hansen's imagined hangars are works that challenge curatorial acumen not through unruly profusion but through evanescence ev·a·nesce  
intr.v. ev·a·nesced, ev·a·nesc·ing, ev·a·nesc·es
To dissipate or disappear like vapor. See Synonyms at disappear.



[Latin
. Somehow Hansen's performative work--Happenings, music and spoken-word pieces, actions based on "scores"--seems even more difficult to recapture than that of other members of the New York Fluxus milieu he was part of. His art and persona were imbued with an antic, hey-kids-let's-put-on-a-show kineticism ki·net·i·cism  
n.
The theory or practice of kinetic art.



ki·neti·cist n.
 that seemed to owe as much to vaudeville as to Dada, and that feels particularly ill-suited to the white-cube setting. A recent exhibition at Andrea Rosen Gallery Andrea Rosen Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in Chelsea, New York. The gallery opened in January 1990 with an exhibition of work by Felix Gonzalez-Torres.

Since then it has shown many of the most important modern and contemporary artists such as:
 gracefully negotiated both problems. Instead of attempting to outline Hansen's entire material oeuvre, the show offered a focused grouping of objects; and instead of shoehorning Shoehorning is a ploy alleged by skeptics to be used by psychics as a way to make it sound like their prophecies or those of earlier prophets had come true. The process involves taking an earlier prophecy and attempting to affix a current event to it, with the event apparently  monitors with grainy video footage into the gallery, presented a one-night, multimedia event that partly recaptured the spirit of the artist's live work.

The exhibition, housed in the gallery's project room, comprised thirty-six modestly sized collages and sculptures dated from 1962 to 1994, most depicting Hansen's favorite motif, a stylized styl·ize  
tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es
1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style.

2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize.
 and refreshingly endomorphic en·do·mor·phic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to an endomorph.

2. Created through endomorphism.



[endo(derm) + -morphic.
 female figure he called Venus. This buxom lady, sometimes constructed from meticulous agglomerations of matchsticks or cigarette butts, is clearly descended from the Paleolithic Venus of Willendorf, but she's also a cousin of Tom Wesselmann's "Great American Nude"--a Pop goddess, as neatly summed up in the punning title of Hansen's ShopRite product-label collage Venus of Shop-Ritedorff, 1965. For both Wesselmann and Hansen, that archetypical pictorial subject, the female nude, was a site on which mass media's alternately exhilarating and alienating dislocations of subjectivity could be writ large--in Hansen's case, literally so. Many of his collages from the '60s and '70s, including a number of the Venuses (others had different subjects or were nonrepresentational non·rep·re·sen·ta·tion·al  
adj.
Of, relating to, or being a style of art in which natural objects are not represented realistically; nonobjective.
) are made of bits of Hershey bar wrappers or other printed matter, which Hansen cut into anagrammatic fragments. HEY, SHE, HER, HERS, YES are just a few of the words he put together from the letters on Hershey labels. Artfully composed so that elements featuring typography of differing sizes create a sense of syncopation syncopation (sĭng'kəpā`shən, sĭn'–) [New Gr.,=cut off ], in music, the accentuation of a beat that normally would be weak according to the rhythmic division of the measure. , the word collages are about sound as much as image, and can be located in the nexus of language/performance experimentation that ranges from William S. Burroughs's cut-ups and bebop via the Beats to the aleatoric methods of John Cage (who taught Hansen experimental composition in 1957 at the New School for Social Research New School for Social Research: see New School Univ.  in New York).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Cage's influence was again in evidence at the performance event, where Hansen's daughter Bibbe, grandson Channing, and a group of the artist's friends and collaborators showed interview clips and documentation and restaged various actions, including a semi-improvised Happening. Some of the works presented here were out-and-out hilarious (like a spoken-word rendition of Car Bibbe, 1958, which in its original form was a sort of demolition derby/dance piece for one hundred automobiles), others rather moving--none more so than Elegy for the Fluxus Dead, 1987, performed by Channing Hansen, who added Allan Kaprow's name, and Hansen's, to the rolls.
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Author:Schambelan, Elizabeth
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2006
Words:565
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