Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,481,971 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Carol Bove: Team Gallery.


The 1960s--by which we usually mean the late '60s and early '70s--have been mythologized in a number of ways; exploited by conservatives, who have adopted the insurrectionary tactics originally developed by the Left; eulogized by the popular-music industry; and skewered by writers like Michel Houellebecq, whose novels explore the fallout of the sexual revolution. Artist Carol Bore was raised in Berkeley, California, the place bearing the most vivid date stamp from that era, and has said her interest in this period stems from a need to "think about" her family. Here, rather than assess the triumphs or failures of the period, she created a sort of anthropological rumination-by-exhibition, gently strumming the popular chords of the moment.

"Experiment in Total Freedom," which included a variety of works, from wall drawings in silk thread to sculptural installations, focused on how the cultural and political becomes personal, particularly by being aestheticized in the home. Adventures in Poetry, 2002--three natural-wood shelves laden with books, including a volume of John Giorno's poetry, a 1969 edition of Lao Tzu Lao Tzu (lou dzə), fl. 6th cent. B.C., Chinese philosopher, reputedly the founder of Taoism. It is uncertain that Lao Tzu [Ch.,=old person or old philosopher] is historical. His biography in Ssu-ma Ch'ien's Records of the Historian (1st cent. B.C.'s Tao Te Ching, a text by the Radical Therapist Collective, a copy of Civilization and Its Discontents, Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore's The Medium Is the Massage, Dial Press's Revolution for the Hell of It, and issues of the London-based journal Anarchy--spelled out the sociocultural proclivities of bourgeois hippie-liberals circa 1971, the year Bove was born. Two other shelf works, Conversations with Jorge Luis Borges, 2002-2003, and How People Get Power, 2002, as well as the 178-book floor installation Touching, 2002, were embodied out of equally eclectic mad inspired reading lists. Minimalist furniture--Knoll tables, to be exact--in The Look of Thought; The Ways of Love, 2002, and Vegetables (Land and Sea), 2003, further emphasized the idea that every cultural movement has its attendant (or guiding) aesthetic. Oriented Plane, 2003, a curtain created out of tiny sterling-silver balls and aligned along an east-west axis, evoked (and upgraded) the plastic bead curtains found in love dens. Celebrity culture also put in an appearance: on the show's invitation card, a mug shot of Jane Fonda from an arrest at a war protest; in the gallery, ghostly framed drawings of Mia Farrow, Bianca Jagger, and Twiggy.

Sixties "high" art lurked between the lines in works like the hand-typed Ho Chi Minh Prison Poem, 2001, which, of course, made reference to the Vietnam War but also alluded to the genesis of text-based Conceptual art. Stella, 2003, a drawing made by winding silk thread around nails in the wall, conjured both Buddhist mandalas and the early 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



Reacting against the formal excesses and raw emotionalism of abstract expressionism, the practitioners of minimal art (also sometimes called ABC art) strove to focus attention on the object as an object, reducing its historical and expressive content to the bare minimum.
 of Frank Stella. Slightly lower-brow was Strawberries Need Rain (Afterdark Photocollage), 2003, which called to mind one of the great conundrums of the period--how to visually represent an acid trip--and commemorated what can be seen in retrospect as the period's official fruit (think "Strawberry Fields Forever," the Strawberry Alarm Clock, etc.).

Bore's exhibition was a reminder that, in reconstructing the Age of Aquarius, one is also re-creating the age of New York Minimalism. Ignoring the floppy hats and power flowers, Bore's homage to the '60s was literally grounded "in the text" mad possessed an authoritative formal presence as well as political weight. The notion of a young woman responding to the age of heroic male artists mad women in transition (Barbarella to Hanoi Jane) also ran like a subtle charge through this carefully researched and executed show.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Experiment in Total Freedom includes a variety of works; New York
Author:Schwendener, Martha
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2003
Words:561
Previous Article:Pam Lins: Ten in One Gallery.(New York)(exhibition of plywood sculptures)
Next Article:Meredith Danluck: Andrew Kreps Gallery.(New York)(multidisciplinary artist threads together set of American ideas in this exhibition)
Topics:



Related Articles
Art Wars.(two opinions on controversial art exhibit)(Brief Article)
THE POLITICS OF THE MACHINE.
Light Opera: Robert Greene.(Brief Article)(Interview)
TICKETS ADD TO WOES OF SUSPECT.(News)
COLLEGE STUDENT'S CONTRIBUTIONS PRAISED.(News)
Shelf life: Barry Schwabsky on the art of Carol Bove.(Critical Essay)
Seaforms: an installation project.(High School)
Tishman father and son honored by Skyscraper Museum.(Dan Tishmanwith)(John Tishmanwith)
ARTISTS READY FOR BRUSH WITH GREATNESS ART ASSOCIATION, SHOW HAVE GROWN SINCE 1989 START.(News)
Matt Keegan.(TOP TEN)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles