Andrew Mania: Chisenhale Gallery.Outside is polyglot pol·y·glot adj. Speaking, writing, written in, or composed of several languages. n. 1. A person having a speaking, reading, or writing knowledge of several languages. 2. East London, but once inside Andrew Mania's show "Gogolin" we are in Poland--albeit a Poland of the mind that compounds past and present, authentic and imaginary. The artist's name, stenciled next to the entrance, reads as "Andrzej Mania"; the wall beside the reception desk bears a pointedly untranslated lyric from a Polish polka that, I later discover, concerns a woman's departure from her partner. She's going to Gogolin, in the country's Krapkowice region, but she can't tell him why. Sometimes, as when life feels stale, predictable, lacking romance, you just have to go. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] British-born but of Polish extraction, Mania just went--and ended up in the Great Bialowieza Forest on the Poland-Belarus border, draping draping, n in massage, technique of securely covering and uncovering parts of the body and moving the client. draping covering the animal with sterile drapes for surgery leaving exposed only that part of the body that has been what looks like a saggy duvet cover over a rope spanning a pond: When the viewer's feet pass over a trigger in Chisenhale's darkened main gallery, a ten-minute film projection of what happened next clanks into life. Wind gusts sporadically through the skinny pines to animate the suspended white cloth, daylight absconds, an ominous hum slowly crescendos, and, suddenly, as though the trees were dreaming, the putative zenith of pre--World War II Western sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. blooms in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of Europe's oldest forest: On the blowsy blow·sy adj. Variant of blowzy. blowsy Adjective [blowsier, blowsiest] 1. (of a woman) slovenly or sluttish 2. sheet is projected Fred Astaire's famous dance sequence from Top Hat (1935), the orchestra's flourishes punctuated by fake gunshots. A few years after that film's release, the Nazis were felling trees from Bialowieza for their war effort. Top Hat would later be screened in refugee camps where Mania's Polish mother was held, and part of the mythology he has built up in previous shows is that the future Mrs. Mania, while fleeing from one such camp through an Eastern European forest, encountered a yeti yeti: see abominable snowman. (Young, Entrepreneurial technocraTI) Coined around the turn of the century during the dot-com bubble, there is also a "yetti" variation, which means "young, entrepreneurial, tech-based twenty-something." . Bialowieza, meanwhile--although a unique biosphere recognized by UNESCO--is currently threatened again by intensified timber extraction. Mania's work, then, balances an array of losses and dubieties against an attempt at symbolic restitution, powered primarily by nostalgia for a past only partly illuminated; it also appears to serve notice of his desire to tangle with history and the treachery of personal and collective memory, offsetting a desire for certainty against a romantic wish that the unbelievable might turn out to be factual. This implication is redoubled re·dou·ble v. re·dou·bled, re·dou·bling, re·dou·bles v.tr. 1. To double. 2. To repeat. 3. Games To double the doubling bid of (an opponent) in bridge. v. by the show's other major component, a sturdy life-size chata, or Polish summerhouse, made of warmscented raw timber, its interior brightened by eleven drawings and collages in battered, scavenged frames painted gold (luxury gotten plaintively cheap), and eleven pieces of floral needlework needlework, work done with a needle, either plain sewing, mending, or ornamental work such as embroidery, quilting, smocking, hemstitching, fagoting, some kinds of lace making (see lace), patchwork, and appliqué. , resembling table decorations and keying up a broader inference of embroidery. Images of top-hatted Astaire doppelgangers, horse-riders, and alpine scenes--more echoes of yetis--featuring dangling escape ladders cross-pollinate across carefully amateurish-looking drawings. These sometimes appear indecently keen to resemble emotional excavations, their superficial carelessness and imprecision too composed, too tactical. On several occasions, however, Mania convincingly evokes the viral strain in recollection that can turn both private and collective histories into structures rotten with falsehoods that someone has wanted to believe--particularly so when he mutes his tendency toward wild and unlikely idiosyncrasy idiosyncrasy /id·io·syn·cra·sy/ (-sing´krah-se) 1. a habit peculiar to an individual. 2. an abnormal susceptibility to an agent (e.g., a drug) peculiar to an individual. . I don't know whether the boy he's drawn, standing half-smiling and half-sad and clutching a long white candle beside a votive vo·tive adj. 1. Given or dedicated in fulfillment of a vow or pledge: a votive offering. 2. image of Christ, ever really existed; but I'm sufficiently convinced that this avatar of uncomplicated traditionalism and embryonic hurt is an integral, irrepressible part of Andrew Mania's mental lumber-room. Just as now, and for the foreseeable future, he is part of mine. |
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