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CECILIA VICUNA.


ART IN GENERAL

The exhibition began before one reached the gallery, in the creaky creak·y  
adj. creak·i·er, creak·i·est
1. Tending to creak.

2. Shaky or infirm, as with age; decrepit: creaky knee joints; a creaky regime.
 old elevator that took a long time to rise. Passive and expectant, the viewer, who had yet to see anything, heard something instead - an ethereal trilling Tril·ling   , Lionel 1905-1975.

American literary critic whose works include Beyond Culture (1965) and Sincerity and Authenticity (1972).

Noun 1.
, a woman's voice singing what could have been a lullaby in an unidentifiable Adj. 1. unidentifiable - impossible to identify
identifiable - capable of being identified
 language or an improvised melody. Spatially acute, emotionally direct, but physically elusive, Cecilia Vicuna's Canto (all works 1999) is typical of this Chilean artist - a poet, performer, and sculptor whose work has been little seen in New York outside the 1997 Whitney Biennial. Produced by Art in General, in collaboration with Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center The Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) is a pioneering contemporary art museum located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The CAC is a non-collecting museum that focuses on new developments in painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, performance art and new media.  in Buffalo and DiverseWorks Artspace in Houston, Vicuna's recent show, "cloud-net," offered a precis of a career that spans three decades and as many media.

The installation cloud-net filled the gallery space with what Vicuna vicuna

a species of wild llama. A small compact form, fast disappearing because of uncontrolled hunting. Their fur is much in demand for heavy fabrics. Called also Lama vicugna (syn. Vicugna vicugna).
 calls the "being and non-being of weaving." Ten thick, soft strands of white merino Merino

Breed of medium-sized sheep originating in Spain that has become prominent worldwide. It has a white face, white legs, and crimped fine-wool fleece. Known as early as the 12th century, it may have been a Moorish importation.
 wool were woven across the room, subdividing the gallery into large, open squares. The over/under intersections were loose and the cords slack, so that while the ends were attached where the walls met the ceiling, the net hung low in the center; someone wishing to cross the middle had to duck in and out of its mesh. Tailored to the venue's old SoHo interior, the webbing surrounded support columns, throwing graceful, rayed shadows onto the pressed-tin ceiling. The undyed, unspun wool was, like a cloud, both light and dense, sensuous yet insubstantial. Minimal, almost bland in visual terms, cloud-net worked on the perceptions as air does, holding the body in a gentle yet insistent matrix.

Vicuna's attention to contingent materials has been linked to arte povera and Fluxus, as well as to certain aspects of Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts
, though it derives, too, from her long investigation of indigenous Andean aesthetics and textiles. In the tradition of Lygia Clark and Helio Oiticica, Vicuna blends political activism with experimental aesthetic practice. Exiled from Chile after the 1973 coup against Salvador Allende (she has since returned to her homeland), the artist creates poetry, performances, and sculpture that rely on the fragile and the friable friable /fri·a·ble/ (fri´ah-b'l) easily pulverized or crumbled.

fri·a·ble
adj.
1. Readily crumbled; brittle.

2. Relating to a dry, brittle growth of bacteria.
 - those aspects of language, action, and objects that, as she has said, are "twice precarious, they come from prayer and predict their own destruction."

Like David Hammons or Gabriel Orozco - artists to whom she is often compared - Vicuna composes her work with a shamanic relish for refuse and a taste for puns both linguistic and visual. The associative looseness of her titles and her fondness for bilingual fragments result in work that often requires intuitive completion by her audience. This was most playfully evident in poet's table, a collection of the signature assemblages, or precarios, she has been making since the '60s. Little haikus of detritus, they incorporate raveled yarn, bits of twine twine: see cordage. , broken plastic, sticks, grass, wire, and shells. A discarded piece of bamboo shade, woven with bright yarn scraps, becomes a fragile loom; a bit of plastic netting balances against a stick. Arrayed on a plain plywood shelf in a closet-size side room, the pieces could be read individually or as a group. A sheet of paper on the wall invited viewers to match individual precarios with one of the titles listed. Crashed pencils and grid fuchsia fuchsia: see evening primrose.
fuchsia

Any of about 100 species of flowering shrubs and trees in the genus Fuchsia (family Onagraceae), native to tropical and subtropical regions of Central and South America and to New Zealand and Tahiti.
 were fairly easy to identify, but which was walker st or telar imposible? The poet in question became the viewer.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:New York, New York
Author:Richard, Frances
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Oct 1, 1999
Words:566
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