Carey Young: Ibid Projects.The three large board-mounted ink-jet prints--text panels, really--that make up Carey Young's "Disclaimer" series, 2004, openly claim their heritage in Conceptual art conceptual art Any of various art forms in which the idea for a work of art is considered more important than the finished product. The theory was explored by Marcel Duchamp from c. 1910, but the term was coined in the late 1950s by Edward Kienholz. : Unadorned, visually nondescript non·de·script adj. Lacking distinctive qualities; having no individual character or form: "This expression gave temporary meaning to a set of features otherwise nondescript" presentations of statements with reflexive (theory) reflexive - A relation R is reflexive if, for all x, x R x. Equivalence relations, pre-orders, partial orders and total orders are all reflexive. content of a possibly paradoxical sort, one could easily trace these works' lineage to textbook precursors of the '60s such as John Baldessari's Everything Is Purged from This Painting but Art; No Ideas Have Entered This Work, 1966-68, and Mel Ramsden's Guaranteed Painting, 1967-68. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Unlike much other current neo-Conceptualist work, however, Young's seems relatively unconcerned with calling attention to its historical distance from such sources by engaging in overt (and possibly nostalgic) commentary on it. Perhaps surprisingly, her more straightforward endeavor to continue the Conceptualist con·cep·tu·al·ism n. 1. Philosophy The doctrine, intermediate between nominalism and realism, that universals exist only within the mind and have no external or substantial reality. 2. project of critically examining art as both idea and institution draws strength from this lack of manifest art-historical knowingness. Eschewing winks to insiders, her work just gets down to unfinished business. Young's three disclaimers, developed in collaboration with Massimo Sterpi, a specialist in intellectual-property and art law, invert in·vert v. 1. To turn inside out or upside down. 2. To reverse the position, order, or condition of. 3. To subject to inversion. n. Something inverted. the "guarantees" offered by Baldessari and Ramsden (for that is what their categorical assertions about what has been excluded from the work amount to). By contrast--but like another contemporary work in this genre, Declaration of Intent (Disclaimer), 1999, by Canadian artist Ron Terada--Young's disclaimers enumerate To count or list one by one. For example, an enumerated data type defines a list of all possible values for a variable, and no other value can then be placed into it. See device enumeration and ENUM. all that is uncertain about an artwork. Disclaimer: Ontology ontology: see metaphysics. ontology Theory of being as such. It was originally called “first philosophy” by Aristotle. In the 18th century Christian Wolff contrasted ontology, or general metaphysics, with special metaphysical theories even goes so far as to state THE ARTIST DOES NOT REPRESENT THIS TO BE A WORK OF ART. This is evasive almost to the point of hypocrisy, of course, when "this" is being presented by an art gallery as the work of an artist, yet its logic is superb: In contradiction to the insistence of the first-generation Conceptualists (all progeny PROGENY - 1961. Report generator for UNIVAX SS90. of Rauschenberg's portrait of Iris Clert Iris Clert was the owner of the Galerie Iris Clert from 1955 to 1971. During its tenure, her gallery became an avant-garde hotspot in the international art scene, particularly to Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, and Arman. , 1961) on the artist's intention, in the end it is always others who must take responsibility for the designation of an object as an artwork. And, so, ANY REPRESENTATION OR CLAIM THAT THIS IS A WORK OF ART IS THE EXCLUSIVE. RESPONSIBILITY OF THE PERSON WHO ASSERTS IT. Disclaimer: Access, on the other hand, concedes its status as art, but acknowledges that its aesthetic qualities, or rather "access" to them, MAY BE INTERRUPTED, RESTRICTED OR DELAYED so that NO WARRANTY OR GUARANTEE CAN BE OFFERED THAT SUBSEQUENT VIEWING OF THIS PIECE WILL GENERATE IDENTICAL OR SIMILAR EMOTIONS, REACTIONS OR COMMENTS. And given that a thing may not necessarily be art, or that, if it is, its character as such may not be accessible, the bottom line is what we learn from Disclaimer: Value--that the thing may have no value in the art market, and that if it does have any, this value may not be FREE FROM INFLUENCE BY HYPE, SPECULATION, ADVERTISEMENT OR ANY OTHER PHENOMENON NOT RELATED TO ARTISTIC CONTENT. A related video, Terms and Conditions, 2004, shows a young woman in a business suit standing amid a green and pleasant landscape talking about the "site" in phrases evidently lifted from disclaimers for websites. Leaning heavily and at length on this simple play on the word "site," the video soon wears out its welcome. But the leaner, more concise ironies of the three printed works keep echoing insidiously. --BS |
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