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Allan McCollum: Friedrich Petzel Gallery.


Allan McCollum Elmer 1879-1967.
American biochemist and nutritionist who first classified vitamins, distinguishing between fat-soluble (A) vitamins and water-soluble (B) vitamins.
 once asserted that a typical viewer's relationship to a work of art is predicated on the desire "to be in on things at the source, to be involved in the Primal Scene primal scene
n.
In psychoanalysis, the actual or imagined observation by a child of sexual intercourse, particularly between the parents.
, not out in the hall looking through the keyhole." It is, however, precisely out in the metaphoric hall that McCollum has established an outpost, basing his oeuvre on the ways in which fantasies of immersion play themselves out in the fetishistic production, circulation, and consumption of art and other symbolic objects. His best-known series, the "Surrogate surrogate n. 1) a person acting on behalf of another or a substitute, including a woman who gives birth to a baby of a mother who is unable to carry the child. 2) a judge in some states (notably New York) responsible only for probates, estates, and adoptions. Paintings," from 1978, and the related "Plaster Surrogates," begun in 1982, made this point explicit, rendering a generic idea of "painting" as so many interchangeable props: theatrical effects designed to represent representation while unmasking those scripts that determine the cultural significance of things.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

McCollum's most recent exhibition also marked an insistence on the play between raptness and remove, pairing a number of his "Perpetual Photos" (begun in 1982) with "The Recognizable Image Drawings" executed just a year ago. The earlier series comprises large black-and-white and sepiatone photographs that, at a glance, walk a fine line between figuration and abstraction, mimicking the indiscriminate contours of Rorschach Hermann 1884-1922.
Swiss psychiatrist. His inkblot test, introduced in 1921, has become a standard clinical diagnostic tool in psychiatry.
 inkblots. Yet the difficulty in reading these images owes less to any inherent formal opacity than a kind of counterintuitive distancing effect. It is as though the eye has been pressed too close to the object it wants to see. And, indeed, it was precisely this desire to get nearer to images as they stubbornly recede that propelled the "Perpetual Photos." Noting the ubiquity of indecipherable framed "art" images that appeared as props in television programs, McCollum began snapping shots of them directly from the screen. The artist then blew-up these highly suggestive--if hard-to-discern--images and framed them, pasting the original shots on the back as slippery evidence of their original context.

In one famous rumination
1. the casting up of the food to be chewed thoroughly a second time, as in cattle.
2. in humans, the regurgitation of food after almost every meal, part of it being vomited and the rest swallowed: a condition sometimes seen in infants (rumination disorder) or in mentally retarded individuals.
3. meditation.
 on the tube, "Television: Set and Screen" (1996), Samuel Weber reminds us that the word television, literally rendered, means "seeing at a distance" or, better, "farsightedness farsightedness /far·sight·ed·ness/ (fahr-sit´ed-nes) hyperopia.

far·sight·ed·ness (färs
." And while the "Perpetual Photos" were his only works based on TV per se, such a concept neatly describes nearly all of McCollum's methods, which hover deliciously between sharp institutional critique and melancholy visual poetics. "The Recognizable Image Drawings," for instance, can also be seen in this light, even while the artist initially appears to have panned out (rather than zoomed in) to make the work.

The drawings were part of The Kansas and Missouri Topographical Model Donation Project, 2003, for which McCollum produced and donated plaster topographical relief models of Kansas and Missouri to some 120 historical societies in those states. The recipients were invited to paint, decorate, and display the models however they saw fit--many recruited local artists or hobbyist groups to take part. An additional aspect of the project was borne out in a series of 220 small graphite drawings, each detailing the contours of another discrete geometric shape. If, as the title suggests, these shapes were meant to be instantly "recognizable," however, they would be so only to a very select audience. Each schematic drawing depicted a different county in Kansas or Missouri, eliciting identification in its inhabitants (past and present) but a curious emptiness in the rest of us. Yet here, as in the "Perpetual Photos" of twenty years before, what McCollum evinced was a certain farsightedness, a productively thwarted desire to recognize more than recognition it self--in other words, the view through the keyhole.
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Title Annotation:NEW YORK
Author:Burton, Johanna
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:578
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