Biennale.An examination of borders--of conditions at the edges of culture, politics, and science--is clearly timely, given the dubious credibility of cultural convergence. The Ninth Biennale of Sydney The Biennale of Sydney is an international festival of contemporary art, held every two years in Sydney, Australia. It is the largest and best-attended contemporary visual arts event in the country. indexed the strategies of postcolonial art: bricolage bri·co·lage n. Something made or put together using whatever materials happen to be available: "Even the decor is a bricolage, a mix of this and that" Los Angeles Times. , mimicry mimicry, in biology, the advantageous resemblance of one species to another, often unrelated, species or to a feature of its own environment. (When the latter results from pigmentation it is classed as protective coloration. , and hybridization hybridization /hy·brid·iza·tion/ (hi?brid-i-za´shun) 1. crossbreeding; the act or process of producing hybrids. 2. molecular hybridization 3. . Curator Anthony Bond focused on art about boundaries and transgression, stressing recombinative bricolage as crucial to border art. Romero de Andrade Lima constructed androgynous an·drog·y·nous adj. 1. Biology Having both female and male characteristics; hermaphroditic. 2. Being neither distinguishably masculine nor feminine, as in dress, appearance, or behavior. cult figures from composite parts; Orshi Drozdik combined medical props and theories of cultural control in a literalization of the gendered subject's borders; Guilio Paolini's installation of chairs and canvas L'Ospite (The host, 1992), elegantly constructed the illusion of reflected space seen in reverse, suggesting an affinity between arte povera and the marginal. On the other hand, Narelle Jubelin's Dead Slow, 1991, and Guillermo Gomez-Pena & Coco Fusco's The Year of the White Bear, 1992, destabilized the idea of borders using metaphors of intercultural mobility. Jubelin recorded the links between Bombay, Scotland, and Australia by tracing the intertextuality Intertextuality is the shaping of texts' meanings by other texts. It can refer to an author’s borrowing and transformation of a prior text or to a reader’s referencing of one text in reading another. of sewing manuals and translating these sources into painstaking petit-point embroidery. At the Australian Museum, Gomez-Pena & Fusco exhibited themselves as caged Amerindian savages from a recently discovered island in the Gulf of Mexico Noun 1. Gulf of Mexico - an arm of the Atlantic to the south of the United States and to the east of Mexico Golfo de Mexico Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east . As a reenactment re·en·act also re-en·act tr.v. re·en·act·ed, re·en·act·ing, re·en·acts 1. To enact again: reenact a law. 2. of the scandal that greeted the discovery of New-World cultures in 1492, The Year of the White Bear resonated with a different set of associations in Australia: awareness of comparatively recent trade in aboriginal bones intersected with, in Gomez-Pena's words, an affront to contemporary "cultimulturalism." The Biennale also inadvertently marked the probable demise of installation as a means of rewriting identity. Though installation, bricolage, and the ready-made have a long tradition as "survival practices" in peripheral societies, the most interesting installations in this exhibition were by artists with considerable reputations. Ashley Bickerton's Seascape: Floating costume to drift for eternity, 1991, was a lifeboat made of fiberglass, webbing glass, and an embalmed Christian Dior suit. Melanie Counsell's glassed-off warehouse space defined borders as the almost imperceptible framing edges of art. For these artists, as for Paolini, the border represented an aspect of Duchampian tradition. If boundaries were everywhere present, transgression was remarkably absent, with the exception of Swedish artist Dan Wolgers' wall of smashed windows--shattered glass littered the gallery floor. However, sanc timonious conformity often smothered smoth·er v. smoth·ered, smoth·er·ing, smoth·ers v.tr. 1. a. To suffocate (another). b. To deprive (a fire) of the oxygen necessary for combustion. 2. the Bond Store's vast space: the illustration of social activism tends toward sentimentality. An exclusive reading of bricolage through assemblage artificially limited the range of the Ninth Biennale. Fiction and deliberate misinterpretation emerged as the most challenging aspect of contemporary border art: Wim Delvoye's Labour of Love, 1992, continued the artist's displacement of Flemish decorative tradition. In an allusion to Dutch East-Indian colonial furniture, Delvoye hired traditional Indonesian craftsmen to carve roadworks equipment. Like Narelle Jubelin, Delvoye examined the complex networks of global trade; art represented the fantastic overexpenditure of an Other's labor. In an impressively manipulative, expressively eclectic critique of museum spectacle, Gomez-Pena & Fusco addressed the instability of the identities conferred upon them as Hispanic Americans. As in Labour of Love, the deliberate outcome was cultural-border kitsch in which straightforward complicity was avoided. Similarly, The Year of the White Bear, savages hi-tech joggers, supermarket kitchen ware, lap-top computers, and exotic native headgear headgear, n the apparatus encircling the head or neck and providing attachment for an intraoral appliance in use of extraoral anchorage. headgear, radiologic, n a device that is used to protect the head from injury by radiation. . The "native Americans'" availability for representation coincided with their exploitation of the audience. Delvoye, Gomez-Pena & Fusco rewrite authenticity as border art. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion