Bojan Sarcevic. (Reviews).PINKSUMMER A glass case at the center of the gallery contained four rolls of semitransparent paper. But these were not continuous sheets, nor did they have straight edges. Rather, they had been pieced together from clippings with irregular edges, strips of tracing paper marked with graphite lines, the borders broken by extremely precise curved or rectilinear rec·ti·lin·e·ar adj. Moving in, consisting of, bounded by, or characterized by a straight line or lines: following a rectilinear path; rectilinear patterns in wallpaper. cuts. It might have seemed like a huge expenditure of energy, a great effort transformed into a simple image, one that might have been obtained with greater economy. But it was nothing of the sort. Sarcevic concentrates on throwaways, neglected signs that he finds to have profound meaning in and of themselves. In this case, Mies's Leftover (all works 2002) was created by collecting scraps of tracing paper from the floor of an architect's office. When one realizes this, everything becomes clearer, and the intention behind the form comes to the surface. In exhibiting the rolls of paper, the Belgrade-born artist (now living in Paris) was showing not only the leftovers of a work but more specifically the process that generated those remnants. Looking carefully at the clippings, one could imagine the moment of the cut and, moving backward, mentally reconstruct the drawing of the outlines for the construction of a model--a pilaster pilaster (pĭlăs`tər), in architecture, upright supporting member, attached to and projecting slightly from the face of a wall and equipped with a base and capital like a column; also, a similar form used decoratively. is rectangular, a wall is linear, an open door is a semicircle, and so on. Reversing the process of subtraction subtraction, fundamental operation of arithmetic; the inverse of addition. If a and b are real numbers (see number), then the number a−b is that number (called the difference) which when added to b (the subtractor) equals that leads to a discarding of what isn't needed, we obtain new data, information about the past and its traces, descriptions of a specific experience. From a simple group of rolled up sheets, two-dimensional paper surfaces, we can work our way back to three-dimensional volumes and imagine a piece of architecture by someone like Mies van der Rohe--all through a chain of mental associations. On the walls of the gallery were a group of snapshots. One depicted an African house's exterior wall, built with a great variety of bricks (Home); two others depicted the artist's studio floors made of an agglomeration ag·glom·er·a·tion n. 1. The act or process of gathering into a mass. 2. A confused or jumbled mass: of different woods (Untitled)-- images of collected refuse which have been gathered in turn from the leftovers of Sarcevic's own working process. Even Paris's outskirts, in Cimetiere Mont-Rouge (Mont-Rouge cemetery), appear as a kind of urban detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue. de·tri·tus n. pl. . Fountain, made of an image cut out of a newspaper, shows a pyramid of bricks spurting spurt n. 1. A sudden forcible gush or jet. 2. A sudden short burst, as of energy, activity, or growth. v. spurt·ed, spurt·ing, spurts v.intr. 1. a jet of water, bloodred in color. This is a monument in Tehran to the soldiers lost in the Iran-Iraq war Iran-Iraq War, 1980–88, protracted military conflict between Iran and Iraq. It officially began on Sept. 22, 1980, with an Iraqi land and air invasion of western Iran, although Iraqi spokespersons maintained that Iran had been engaging in artillery attacks on . The rough and simplified appearance of the fountain carried out its commemorative intention to excess: a public monument, inconceivable in the West, that grotesquely embodies the symbolism of death and sacrifice. Such signs, removed from the context for which they were created, still bear a heavy weight on their own. These are traces captured through photo graphy, newspaper clippings, other people's discards, or even remains of old installations. Untitled, 2002, is a life-size trace: an accumulation of planks of wood and wood shavings shavings curly wafers of wood produced when trimming wood with a plane; used as bedding for horses. See also sawdust. , reproducing in shape and dimension the remains of a piece Sarcevic once made. It, too, entices us to reconstruct what is visible only through its remains. Translated from Italian by Marguerite Marguerite, for French women thus named, use Margaret Marguerite. For French women thus named, use Margaret. marguerite, in botany marguerite: see daisy. Shore. |
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