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Cerith Wyn Evans: Museum of Fine Arts.


Eight years after his solo debut at White Cube in London, the work of Cerith Wyn Evans--a fixture in European galleries and museums--finally arrived in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
For other places with the same name, see Museum of Fine Arts.


The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts, is one of the largest museums in the United States, and contains one of the largest permanent museum collections in the Americas.
. It was worth the wait, as I discovered as soon as I came face-to-face with the five-foot-wide concave Concave

Property that a curve is below a straight line connecting two end points. If the curve falls above the straight line, it is called convex.
 mirror (Inverse, Reverse, Perverse, 1996) that is the show's curtain-raiser. The title refers to the three reflections one encounters when approaching the work: from a distance of about four feet, an upside-down, warped view of the visual field; a step closer, a blown-up image of one's torso, along with a percussive per·cus·sive  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characterized by percussion.



per·cussive·ly adv.
 echo; another step, a more conventional mirror image, albeit alarmingly close up. Beyond this introduction, the rather spare installation has a simple sequence: After Inverse, Reverse, Perverse comes a room hung with striking black-and-white photographs by Wyn Evans's father (accompanied by a large wall text that interrupts the sequence); a corridor containing a forlorn coaxial cable in a vitrine; and, finally, a set of seven glass, crystal, and silver chandeliers blinking out Morse code in a large empty gallery.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The cable was on loan to the exhibition from the nearby MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  List Visual Arts Center and embodies qualities that are themselves the mirror images of those preserved by the beaux beaux  
n.
A plural of beau.
 arts museum. For the singular, finished sculpture, substitute the mass-produced industrial good. For the artwork whose merit is intrinsic, substitute the artifact whose sole attraction, according to Wyn Evans's wild imagination, is that it may have been part of the very telegraph (or telephone) network over which Marcel Duchamp corresponded with his collectors, the Arensbergs.

One feels the legacy of Duchamp not only in this piece but even in the one work that seems drenched in pathos, the sequence of black-and-white photographs of anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs.  driftwood and portraits made by Cerith's father, Sulwyn Evans. The series is both a touching homage by the younger Evans to the man who introduced him to art and a poignant reminder of the generational divide between a father for whom art was a matter of creating beautiful new forms and a son whose practice revolves around concepts and ideas rather than traditional norms of aesthetic beauty.

"Dialogue" is a term that permeates discussions of Wyn Evans's work, but in his installations, communication often fails or seems to slow down. One of these message inhibitors is technology, particularly obsolete modes, like the telegraphy so cannily represented by the MIT cable. Other obstacles to language include the act of translation and the limitations of its material support, both of which are apparent in the chandelier works. The speed at which the lights flicker, constantly transforming the sensorial sensorial /sen·so·ri·al/ (sen-sor´e-al) pertaining to the sensorium.

sen·so·ri·al
adj.
Of or relating to sensations or sensory impressions.
 field, contrasts starkly with the tedium of waiting for the words they are translating into Morse code to appear on the computer screens nearby. I did not stick around long enough to read all the snippets of Michel de Certeau Michel de Certeau (Chambéry, 1925- Paris, 9 January 1986) was a French Jesuit and scholar whose work combined psychoanalysis, philosophy, and the social sciences.

Michel de Certeau was born in 1925 in Chambéry, France. Certeau's education was eclectic.
, Judith Butler, and others. I just let myself be dazzled by the lights, recalling one of Wyn Evans's favorite sayings (and the title of an excellent concurrent exhibition of his work at the List): "Thoughts unsaid, now forgotten ..."
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Author:Galvez, Paul
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2004
Words:524
Previous Article:Alessandra Sanguinetti: Yossi Milo Gallery.
Next Article:Boris Mikhailov: Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston.
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