Bozidar Brazda: Haswellediger & Co. Gallery.When producing art for public exhibition, how and to what extent should one reshape the particulars of autobiography into the more widely appreciable generalities of broader human experience? The question was raised by the second solo show at Haswellediger by Canada-born, New York-based artist Bozidar Brazda. The press release, written by the artist, made a superficial concession to universality by supplanting sup·plant tr.v. sup·plant·ed, sup·plant·ing, sup·plants 1. To usurp the place of, especially through intrigue or underhanded tactics. 2. place names with asterisks in a narrative based on events in the lives of Brazda's family, as if these experiences could happen to anyone, anywhere. Despite this background information, the painted prints, sculptural installations, video, and giveaway posters on view, all accompanied by a loud sound track comprising five versions of the Monkees' "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone," remained frustratingly opaque. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Brazda frequently pens tales to accompany his objects, installations, and performances. A missive from a fictional journalist recently sprung from prison by a group of punk rockers who repeatedly query him about Hegel introduced his last solo exhibition, in which the IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries) Selectric typewriter Introduced in 1961 by IBM, the first typewriter to use a golf ball-like type element that moved across the paper, rather than moving the paper carriage across the print mechanism. he writes with was among the objects on view. In this show's announcement, the artist mentions an album recorded by his father and his uncle the year after he was born before linking his family's forced emigration emigration: see immigration; migration. ahead of Soviet tanks, in 1968, to the episode of The Monkees, aired around the same time, in which "Steppin' Stone" was performed and which also features Soviet spies. It is an inventive association, though one that less charitable viewers might find tenuous. Certainly the link between the sound track--the Monkees' original and covers by Paul Revere Revere, city (1990 pop. 42,786), Suffolk co., E Mass., a residential suburb of Boston, on Massachusetts Bay; settled c.1630, set off from Chelsea and named for Paul Revere 1871, inc. as a city 1914. and the Raiders, the Flies, the Sex Pistols, and Minor Threat--and the artwork on view was less than easy to discern. A small black-and-white poster depicts what looks like a mosh pit mosh pit n. An area in front of a concert stage in which audience members mosh. (perhaps at a Minor Threat show), complete with stage diver; the words CAFE CORE are printed atop the words HARD CORE in the grainy grain·y adj. grain·i·er, grain·i·est 1. Made of or resembling grain; granular. 2. Resembling the grain of wood. 3. Having a granular appearance due to the clumping of particles in the emulsion. original image. A stack of these was placed near the door, and four copies were hung around the room, one bearing the painted inscription BEING BOZIDAR BRAZDA and three marked with brushed-on additions so derivative of Bruce Nauman's wordplay (EAT MEET, also painted above a white plaster cast of an ear affixed af·fix tr.v. af·fixed, af·fix·ing, af·fix·es 1. To secure to something; attach: affix a label to a package. 2. to another wall) and imagery (two schematic heads, seen in profile) that the gesture must have been deliberate, though the motive behind this homage remains obscure. Elsewhere, a metal chair, its seat upholstered in leopard-print fabric, and an overturned table--perhaps from Cafe Core--accompany a wall text (printed backwards) excerpted from the press release. It is terse, disenchanted dis·en·chant tr.v. dis·en·chant·ed, dis·en·chant·ing, dis·en·chants To free from illusion or false belief; undeceive. [Obsolete French desenchanter, from Old French, , and epigrammatic ep·i·gram·mat·ic also ep·i·gram·mat·i·cal adj. 1. Of or having the nature of an epigram. 2. Containing or given to the use of epigrams. : "No one cares about Uptown or Downtown anymore"; "nowadays it's more about the artist's head"; "understanding your formative years is more of an act of faith than it is a science." As text, what with its direct address and lumbering momentum, it has a certain cynical charm, and one can imagine it recited by a jaded hardcore kid idling in a coffee shop. As art, however, it feels limited and limiting. Like Walid Raad, whose slide lectures-cum-performances are more fascinating than his collages, videos, and photographs, it's possible that Brazda is a more compelling writer and performer than visual artist. On the evidence of this exhibition, it might serve him well to focus on his texts, extending them beyond press releases and capsule descriptions into something more substantial than the fragments found here. |
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