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Bernar Venet: Robert Miller. (Reviews: New York).


In 1973, Bernar Venet wrote an essay in which he disclaimed any connection with "Duchampian style or Nouveau Realisme" and instead connected his art to the theory of French semiologist Jacques Bertin, which grouped signs into three categories. The first set of signs, called the pansemic, were associated with music and nonfigurative imagery in art; the second, the polysemic, with words and figurative imagery; and the third, the monosemic, with mathematics and graphic imagery. For Venet, there was an overabundance o·ver·a·bun·dance  
n.
A going or being beyond what is needed, desired, or appropriate; an excess: teenagers with an overabundance of energy.
 of nonfigurative and figurative imagery in the visual arts visual arts nplartes fpl plásticas

visual arts nplarts mpl plastiques

visual arts npl
. Indeed, he thought that they had been done to death, and that the only way to rescue art from itself, from entropic redundancy, was by basing it on the mathematical graph-which for Bertin was the only true monosemic image. It is a completely rational model, Venet wrote, arguing that art must become "solely a place of manifestation of a code."

Is it correct, then, to consider Venet's sculptures and drawings in this exhibition as illustrations of this code and, as such, conceptual? Are they a kind of applied mathematics? Not entirely. Each of Venet's "Arcs," 1976- (not included in this show), is a measurable segment of a circle's circumference, usually accompanied both in the title and work itself by the mathematical formula that "describes" it. But Venet also makes "Indeterminate Lines," 1983-, which he regards as "free" and "not definable mathematically"-thus wittingly wit·ting  
adj.
1. Aware or conscious of something.

2. Done intentionally or with premeditation; deliberate.

v.
Present participle of wit2.

n. Chiefly British
1.
 subverting his own premises, as though to signal that rendering a code artistically is implicitly irrational. Reified, the graph line becomes convulsive con·vul·sive
adj.
1. Characterized by or having the nature of convulsions.

2. Having or producing convulsions.



convulsive

pertaining to, characterized by, or of the nature of a convulsion.
 and eccentric, seeming to lose its bearings. It becomes playful and unpredictable, gaining in force what it loses in reason; and what the work loses in intellectual hauteur hauteur

machine-estimated mean fiber length in a top of wool; the basis for the pricing of tops.
 it gains in material grandeur. Indeed, it becomes a grand gesture-an eloquently dramatic expression of space. As Venet says, "randomness is one of the rules of t he game," which produces at least the appearance of absurdity, "freeing sculpture from the constraints of composition."

But Venet's lines seem at once random and composed, as though a graph line were unraveling but not yet at the stage of collapse, with some self-deconstruction still in process. The epic line, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, seems to be showing its lyric underside. Process is particularly evident in the drawings; atmospheric charcoal constitutes the line, giving it a density that adds to its monumentality. The monumentality-indeed, stateliness-of the three-dimensional works is explicit. Venet regards this current group as "brutal" compared with his earlier ones, which he calls more "elegant." There is now a greater sense of "density," which has to do with his use of a thicker metal. In this show, they threaten the static grandeur of the large Chelsea gallery space with their own grandeur and movement. There is something oddly vertiginous ver·tig·i·nous
adj.
1. Affected by vertigo; dizzy.

2. Tending to produce vertigo.


vertiginous adjective Related to vertigo, dizzy
 about them. They seem to swirl through space.

Venet's works are abstract expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism  
n.
A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences.



ex·pres
 in spite of themselves: They are nonfigurative and "musical," for they depend on mathematical language even when they negate ne·gate  
tr.v. ne·gat·ed, ne·gat·ing, ne·gates
1. To make ineffective or invalid; nullify.

2. To rule out; deny. See Synonyms at deny.

3.
 it. They may be bound to theory, but the drawings suggest that however much they may be what Duchamp called "intellectual expressions," they are also subliminally "animal expressions." The mathematical may suppress the instinctive, but the suppressed makes itself felt indirectly, vitalizing vi·tal·ize  
tr.v. vi·tal·ized, vi·tal·iz·ing, vi·tal·iz·es
1. To endow with life; animate.

2. To make more lively or vigorous; invigorate.
 the whole work. Indeed, Venet is not Duchampian, but perhaps not for the reasons he believes.
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Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:549
Previous Article:Jonathan Podwil: Plane Space. (Reviews: New York).
Next Article:Sergei Bugaev: I-20 Gallery. (Reviews: New York).
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