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Aleksandra Mir: Galerie Laurent Godin.


For her first solo exhibition in Paris, Aleksandra Mir--Polish-born, a Swedish citizen, and a New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 resident since 1989--festooned Galerie Laurent Godin with every variety of Mexican kitsch: paper flowers, salad bowls of plastic fruit, bread, and alphabet letters; a skeleton in a suit seated in front of a laptop; cacti painted on the wall; hanging bird cages with little bird skeletons; about a dozen pasted images of the defunct Concorde supersonic jet over headshots of Che Guevara Noun 1. Che Guevara - an Argentine revolutionary leader who was Fidel Castro's chief lieutenant in the Cuban revolution; active in other Latin American countries; was captured and executed by the Bolivian army (1928-1967)
Ernesto Guevara, Guevara
; floral designs in kindergarten colors; found posters; collages of magazine pictures; notebook pages outlining a video; various versions of the phrase YO NO HABLO ESPANOL (I don't speak Spanish); and a circular sign painting, "Club Nocturn noc·turn  
n.
Any of the three canonical divisions of the office of matins.



[Middle English nocturne, from Medieval Latin nocturna, from Latin, feminine of nocturnus,
, Live Music," writ large, in Spanish, in front of a paint-dabbed black felt curtain. Inside was projected a fifty-five-minute documentary-style video Organized Movement, which Mir had made during a monthlong artist residence in Mexico City Mexico City
 Spanish Ciudad de México

City (pop., 2000: city, 8,605,239; 2003 metro. area est., 18,660,000), capital of Mexico. Located at an elevation of 7,350 ft (2,240 m), it is officially coterminous with the Federal District, which occupies 571 sq mi
 in May 2004. She was among twenty international artists invited by Perros Negros (Black Dogs), organizers of the exhibition "Localismos," which offered an outsider's look at the effects of globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 on the historic center of Mexico City. Mir showed the results of that project in Paris.

The fake folklore was installed in a way reminiscent of the scatter art of Karen Kilimnik or of Claude Leveque's wilder, atmospheric installations. By including images of Che and of the Concorde, Mir conveyed Mexico's unresolved struggles with complicated Central American politics and the pressures of capitalism. But her moderately interesting amateur video, ostensibly os·ten·si·ble  
adj.
Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity.
 about her attempts to reach out to Mexican locals, focused on her inability to speak Spanish and on her decision to take various dance classes in order to use dance's "organized movement" to communicate. With a running voice-over, she cut back and forth between color and black-and-white, interior, exterior, and day and night shots, showing encounters with people on the street, disappointing performances as a nonetheless contented dancer, and talks with fellow artists. Among them was a Mexican rock group Lasser Moderna, who performed their electronic cumbia-style music at Mir's Paris opening, almost two years later. But in trying to communicate, the video served as her interior monologue, and instead of revealing the individuality of locals, what stood out were the effects of globalization: how people are similar, not how they differ, which was neither her intention nor that of Perros Negros. A similar documentary could be made in Beijing or Timbuktu, to similar effect.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The most lasting impression was that today's globe-trotting artists (and musicians) have turned the last forty years of Conceptual art, performance art, installation art, and ubiquitous white cubes into a global Esperanto--an audiovisual lingua franca in which art is an arm of mass communications. Maybe it's no coincidence that the four finalists of the 2004 Turner Prize (awarded to Jeremy Deller), the year Mir made her video, were all documentary-style works. Artists today, and groups like Perros Negros, are responding to globalization, just as predecessors like Hans Haacke responded to art's dependence on rich patrons, or Nancy Spero and Judy Chicago to the antiwar an·ti·war  
adj.
Opposed to war or to a particular war: antiwar protests; an antiwar candidate. 
 and feminist movements. Even seemingly abstract artists like Sol Le Witt turned away from finished objects toward the anthropology of "noticing" and the implied double meanings of metarepresentation. Today's generation, including cultural hybrids like Mir, contends with the complexities of mass-representation technologies, which belong to everyone, and from which they struggle to forge new forms of artistic metarepresentation, of which this show was a Tower of Babel Babel (bā`bəl) [Heb.,=confused], in the Bible, place where Noah's descendants (who spoke one language) tried to build a tower reaching up to heaven to make a name for themselves. , the inchoate Imperfect; partial; unfinished; begun, but not completed; as in a contract not executed by all the parties.


inchoate adj. or adv. referring to something which has begun but has not been completed, either an activity or some object which is
 ziggurat ziggurat (zĭg`răt), form of temple common to the Sumerians, Babylonians and Assyrians. The earliest examples date from the end of the 3d millenium B.C.  of Mir's imagination.
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Author:Rian, Jeff
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2006
Words:584
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