Alex Bag: Elizabeth Dee Gallery.Alex Bag's "Coven Services for Consumer Mesmerism 1. A strong or spellbinding appeal; fascination. 2. Hypnotic induction that is believed to involve animal magnetism. 3. Hypnotism. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In the video Bag and friends appear variously as hip consumers ("Before AOL I was a total loser"), an undead, blood-spitting spokesmodel for thong pads, robotic war hero Jessica Lynch, a Chase Bank card-wielding nun with vampire teeth, a Prozac-pushing witch named Eli Lilly, and so on. These hilarious promotional "spots" are intercut with footage from Paris Hilton's amateur porn video, which looks as if it were filtered through some kind of night-vision effect that recalls televised war coverage and makes the hotel heiress's eyes glow like a demon's. Various shades of green--a wall painting in the gallery's front room, the witch's complexion, the grainy green of the sex tape--lend the trashy chaos of this cut-and-paste, antislick installation a bit of compositional coherence while producing an atmosphere the color of both cash and sickness. While the installation and a few of its "products" seem to have been thrown together in an overnight frenzy, giving the whole thing a rushed high school report feeling, Bag's intention is clearly not to achieve the spectacular efficiency of the enemy. The artist's tactical "failure" to deliver a professionally packaged, market-friendly art show is as studied as her various embodiments of the powerless, medicated, zombified states a person is reduced to in consumer society today. Refusing to hand us a seamless, polished art product, she instead interrupts this program to conjure haunting images of the human subject as biopolitical product in progress, thinking and performing techniques of the self like a stand-up comic on a roll. The figures of the corpse and the zombie recur throughout the show, and if Bag has witch power it is in her ability to reanimate these gone bodies, to make them speak from beyond the grave, from beyond the market study. This is living-dead art, a critical-hysterical acting out of the deodorized-bathroom neurotic, the suicidal biochemical-test subject and the terminal media addict we all recognize as ourselves. Paris Hilton and Michael Jackson also recur as possible stand-ins for the artist as ambiguous self-producer/destroyer: the sad and beautiful monsters of control society, with all their strange genius and perversions intact. |
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