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California Biennial: Various Venues.


Where previous California Biennials have made comprehensive statements about the salient formal or conceptual proclivities of contemporary art on the West Coast, this year's version does not seem arranged according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 any central theme. Nevertheless, the work on view is necessarily imbued with a sense of "place" and, in fact, organizers Elizabeth Armstrong and Irene Hoffmann are to be commended for highlighting artists who are all contending, in one way or another, with Lucy Lippard's "lure of the local."

Among the most compelling are the collectives VALDES (San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley

Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills.
 Institute of Design) and Futurefarmers, both of which are steeped in analyses of the fluctuating topographies of Los Angeles, attempting to reformulate Verb 1. reformulate - formulate or develop again, of an improved theory or hypothesis
redevelop

formulate, explicate, develop - elaborate, as of theories and hypotheses; "Could you develop the ideas in your thesis"
 such maligned ma·lign  
tr.v. ma·ligned, ma·lign·ing, ma·ligns
To make evil, harmful, and often untrue statements about; speak evil of.

adj.
1. Evil in disposition, nature, or intent.

2.
 developments as suburban sprawl, gated communities, and strip malls. In the case of VALDES, which consists of the Harvard-trained architects Jeffrey Inaba and Peter Zellner, the result here is a series of banners suggesting the wholesale exportation of Orange County's living standards to China--an only partly ironic gloss on the famous Situationist strategy of map switching. As with Futurefarmers' rethinking of the stalled "Great Park" project (the projected conversion of a former Orange County army base into a recreational space and nature preserve), this work obviously could not be made anywhere else.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Likewise Ruben Ochoa's continuing Class: C project. Begun in 2001, when Ochoa refurbished the beige 1985 Chevy van that served as the delivery vehicle for his family's tortilla business with all the accoutrements ac·cou·ter·ment or ac·cou·tre·ment  
n.
1. An accessory item of equipment or dress. Often used in the plural.

2. Military equipment other than uniforms and weapons. Often used in the plural.

3.
 of a "white cube," this gallery on wheels has valiantly sought to confront the marginalized status of art in LA's outlying communities. Over the course of the biennial, Ochoa hosted three separate exhibitions in his van, each with a unique itinerary of stops throughout Orange County, San Diego, and Los Angeles. Ochoa's project casually conflates the pointedly specific (or "local") spheres of Kustom Kar Kulture and street vending with the generic (but, in this instance, wholly anomalous) experience of contemporary art. Art is presented as just one part of a cultural equation, the end product of a process where questions of context and site-specificity are as significant as objects.

At the hub of a spectacular "culture industry," one might say that the landscape of LA and Southern California becomes "sedimented" with cinematic and televisual images that have taken their place in the collective consciousness. Accordingly, a number of artists set their sights on those segments of the local topography most susceptible to phantasmagorical Adj. 1. phantasmagorical - characterized by fantastic imagery and incongruous juxtapositions; "a great concourse of phantasmagoric shadows"--J.C.Powys; "the incongruous imagery in surreal art and literature"
phantasmagoric, surreal, surrealistic
 slippage. This is clearly the impetus behind Kerry Tribe's dual-screen video projection Here & Elsewhere, 2002. Apparently documenting an interview with a young girl, who is assailed by such philosophical questions as "Is an image real?" Tribe's piece covertly undermines its own credibility with an arsenal of self-reflexive Godardian cues, including a series of cutaways that gradually reveal the context of the exchange--the interior of a modernist home set in the Hollywood Hills. Whatever suspicions are aroused by this highly cinematic setting, the girl's good looks and her undeniable TVQ TVQ Taxe de Vente du Quebec
TVQ Television Quarterly
TVQ Topographic Vector Quantization
TVQ Television Quotient
 are ultimately offset by the law of double negatives: Fiction times two equals an even higher form of reality.

The sense of deja-vu uncanniness in Tribe's film is, to a great extent, given in her subject. Mungo Mun´go

n. 1. A material of short fiber and inferior quality obtained by deviling woolen rags or the remnants of woolen goods, specif.
 Thomson's The American Desert (For Chuck Jones), 2002, reverses Tribe's modus by presenting the mediated version of the landscape first--in this case, the crisply reductive re·duc·tive  
adj.
1. Of or relating to reduction.

2. Relating to, being an instance of, or exhibiting reductionism.

3. Relating to or being an instance of reductivism.
 (and here totally depopulated de·pop·u·late  
tr.v. de·pop·u·lat·ed, de·pop·u·lat·ing, de·pop·u·lates
To reduce sharply the population of, as by disease, war, or forcible relocation.
) desert of Chuck Jones's "Road Runner" cartoons. Yet, at the height of artificiality, here, too, the "real" returns in what could be termed a Baudelairean guise of "genuine illusion." (The poet famously railed that "the majority of our landscape painters are liars, precisely because they fail to lie.") Reducing Jones's animations to a succession of static tableaux, Thomson highlights their historically savvy artistry, but without obscuring, by contrast, the actual desert that was their original point of reference. Shorn shorn  
v.
A past participle of shear.


shorn
Verb

a past participle of shear

Adj. 1.
 of all action and drama, the hand-drawn vista becomes a psycho-geographic key to the area's past.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Similarly, by way of cartoon shorthand, Kota Ezawa's animations extract that highly volatile element of actuality from enveloping en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 layers of mediation. In Home Video, 2001, which features an exterior view of a generic suburban home over the course of days and weeks, and Who's Afraid of Black, White and Grey, 2003, which excerpts representative scenes from Mike Nichols's 1966 film Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? we are given a highly nuanced meditation on the public and private poles of the American middle-class character. The uninflected style of Ezawa's line erodes the distinctions between documentary and dramatic verisimilitude so as to render their respective points of purchase on fact entirely relative.

Among others, Libby Black, Mark Bradford, Sean Duffy, Michelle Lopez, and Kori Newkirk enact a Duchampian directive, pulling items out of the cultural landscape and then amending or wholly remaking them. Objects as diverse as skateboards (Black), gym shoes (Bradford), or Geo-Metro automobiles (Duffy) are approached as either the high-end cream or funky dross of this capital of consumption. The results suggest that we have entered a period of detente dé·tente  
n.
1. A relaxing or easing, as of tension between rivals.

2. A policy toward a rival nation or bloc characterized by increased diplomatic, commercial, and cultural contact and a desire to reduce tensions, as through
 between the once-opposed aims of alienated '80s simulation and the more affirmative personal poetics of '60s assemblage.

In fact, the same point applies to the California Biennial in general: Beginning with those artists who propose to transform the local landscape actively, we end with those who find that transformation to be already underway, or even complete. This second group either reproduces the landscape "whole" or extracts telling details that suggest the bloom of a com-modified "second nature." As the impulse to reintroduce the hand to machine-made substance is increasingly foregrounded, a third group becomes discernible. And finally, once the readymade parts of the work are entirely eclipsed by the assisted parts, a fourth. Here, we witness a kind of resurgent re·sur·gent  
adj.
1. Experiencing or tending to bring about renewal or revival.

2. Sweeping or surging back again.

Adj. 1.
 subjectivism sub·jec·tiv·ism  
n.
1. The quality of being subjective.

2.
a. The doctrine that all knowledge is restricted to the conscious self and its sensory states.

b.
, a quasi-visionary art that floats freely over the earth. This is seen literally in Joel Tauber's film Searching for the Impossible: The Flying Project, 2002-2003, and metaphorically in the work of Brian Calvin, Mark Dutcher, Mindy Shapero, and Josephine Taylor. Documenting the realization of a dream that most of us abandon at childhood--i.e., to fly--Tauber's work also comes closest to resuming the romantic figure of the innocent savant sa·vant  
n.
1. A learned person; a scholar.

2. An idiot savant.



[French, learned, savant, from Old French, present participle of savoir, to know
; but Calvin, Dutcher, Shapero, and Taylor all share a quality of willful naivete na·ive·té or na·ïve·té  
n.
1. The state or quality of being inexperienced or unsophisticated, especially in being artless, credulous, or uncritical.

2. An artless, credulous, or uncritical statement or act.
. No longer responding to worldly things so much as to their attendant fears and desires, these artists bring us full circle by displacing a referential materiality with that of their own production. These are all emphatically indigenous expressions designed to fill the landscape back up, anticipating yet another round of cultural excavation.

Jan Tumlir is a critic based in Los Angeles.
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Article Details
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Author:Tumlir, Jan
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Feb 1, 2005
Words:1100
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