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Andrea Zittel: Regen Projects.


This exhibition paired a prototype for a sculpture or design project by Andrea Zittel Andrea Zittel (b. 1965) is an American installation artist.

In the early 1990s, Andrea Zittel began making art in response to her own surroundings and daily routines, creating functional objects that fulfilled the artist’s needs relating to shelter, food, furniture,
 with Sufficient Self, 2004, a PowerPoint presentation of images accompanied by the artist's casually written comments chronicling her life and work at A-Z West, her expanded cabin and surrounding property on the edge of the Mojave Desert Mojave or Mohave Desert, c.15,000 sq mi (38,850 sq km), region of low, barren mountains and flat valleys, 2,000 to 5,000 ft (610–1,524 m) high, S Calif.; part of the Great Basin of the United States.  town of Joshua Tree Joshua tree: see yucca. . Over the past few years, Zittel has transformed this site into a base for ongoing experimentation with the development and alteration of products for living, including transportation, shelter, clothing, furniture, storage, food, and utensils. Alongside this visual diary, which was presented on a wall-hung flat-screen monitor flat-screen monitor nFlachbildschirm m , was A-Z Homestead Unit from A-Z West, with Raugh Furniture, 2001-2004, a functional model for a small, shed-like, quickly erectable, steel-and-plywood shelter equipped with a few basic comforts and necessities: camping stove, sleeping surface, pillows, blanket, and one of Zittel's trademark felted-alpaca-wool dresses.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The pairing recalled Zittel's installation at last year's Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of recent American art, typically by young and lesser known artists, on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, USA. The event began as an annual exhibition in 1918. , in which she showed the same slide show along with Raugh Desk, 2004, a workstation also developed and used at A-Z West. These two presentations of her work both revealed and resolved Zittel's basic bind since the early '90s. Sometimes visually compelling, sometimes less so; sometimes successful, sometimes not; sometimes seeming to break new ground and propose a fundamental rethinking of our needs and desires, possessions and accommodations, at other times appearing merely to indulge their maker's wayward curiosity, Zittel's objects and environments often depend heavily on a prior knowledge of their backstory back·sto·ry  
n.
1. The experiences of a character or the circumstances of an event that occur before the action or narrative of a literary, cinematic, or dramatic work:
. Once that story is provided, her products tend to become mere byproducts, simple souvenirs.

With Sufficient Self, Zittel succeeds in converting the backstory into the work itself, and the result is intriguing. It's a combination character study, idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 autobiography, frontier adventure tale, sci-fi movie, and interdisciplinary documentary, in which Zittel presents herself as artist, citizen, tinkerer, visionary, control freak control freak Slang
n.
One who has an obsessive need to exert control over people and situations.

Noun 1. control freak - someone with a compulsive desire to exert control over situations and people
, renegade, and glam queen. We watch and read as she and her cohorts engage in activities from the laborious and mundane (acquiring water when a delivery truck breaks down and making clothing by hand) to the ingenious and fun (converting a galvanized gal·va·nize  
tr.v. gal·va·nized, gal·va·niz·ing, gal·va·niz·es
1. To stimulate or shock with an electric current.

2.
 trough into a hot tub by lighting a fire beneath it while being careful not to burn their toes). We also see Zittel's stylishly uniformed "hiking club" take sunset outings to curious sites, and witness her experiments with new inventions. No doubt the posse works hard and doesn't mind being caught in candid moments, but they also know how to play, pose, and look good.

Part of the satisfaction of Zittel's diary is that of observing a maverick at work, designing and modifying her life as she goes and revealing herself as the heir to a range of ancestors including the Bauhaus, Joseph Beuys, Buckminster Fuller, Mary Miss, and Alice Aycock--as well as to a host of unsung hippies, squatters, and outsiders of all kinds. Another pleasure is the magnetic personality of Zittel, whose combination of earnest determination, skillful skill·ful  
adj.
1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
 storytelling, and stylistic flair generates a mystique that adds Davy Crockett, Mad Max, and Barbarella to the mix. Just as Beuys gave us a myth that keeps on giving and Mad Max spawned a trilogy, Zittel seems more than ready for Sufficient Self, Part 2.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:LOS ANGELES; prototype for sculpture paired with slide show of artist's life and work
Author:Miles, Christopher
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:534
Previous Article:Pamela Wilson: Gallery Paule Anglim.(SAN FRANCISCO)(beauty out of chaos on view in paintings and watercolors)(Critical Essay)
Next Article:Anton Henning: Christopher Grimes Gallery.(LOS ANGELES)(paintings are a meditation on the materiality of life)(Critical Essay)
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