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Cindy Bernard: Margo Leavin Gallery.


Once known for tightly plotted, high-concept musings on the ongoing annexation of everyday life by the entertainment industry, Cindy Bernard has more recently converted to the (quasi-)formalist for·mal·ism  
n.
1. Rigorous or excessive adherence to recognized forms, as in religion or art.

2. An instance of rigorous or excessive adherence to recognized forms.

3.
 cause. For an artist whose formative years were spent Greenberg bashing, this may come as either a surprising case of pent-up desire finally released or as a concession to the dictates of fashion. In actuality, it is probably a little of both. Like many of the '80s generation, Bernard has no doubt felt firsthand the confining effect that "issues" can have on art, and her decision to strike out for less-predictable terrain is well taken. That she has wound up in the general category of "sound art" also makes sense: For artists eager to channel the avant-garde spirit of experimentation, this is as good as it gets.

There are two sides to Bernard's current practice. The founder and director of the not-for-profit LA sound-art organization SASSAS (The Society for the Activation of Social Space through Art and Sound), she campaigns valiantly on behalf of such notoriously "difficult" local musicians as Tom Recchion, Joe and Rick Potts, and other former members of LAFMS (the Los Angeles Free Music Society The Los Angeles Free Music Society (LAFMS) has been, since the early 1970s, the banner heading of a loose collective of experimental musicians in Los Angeles, California who were joined by an aesthetic based around radicalism and playfulness. ), as well as their various spin-offs. She acts as curator of the "Sound" concert program and releases recordings of them on the soundCd imprint, which credits her as producer.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

An offshoot of this enterprise, a series of sharp prints reminiscent of the semiempirical manner of the neue Neue Sachlichkeit Neue Sachlichkeit: see new objectivity.
Neue Sachlichkeit

(German; “New Objectivity”)

Movement in German painting of the 1920s and early 1930s reflecting the cynicism and resignation of the post-World War I period.
 (i.e. Thomases Ruff and Struth et al.), was first exhibited at the former Lemon Sky Projects gallery in 2004. Each image comprised two principal elements: a standing or seating area and a performance area, the first lying right beneath the second. As in rudimentary landscapes, these two pictorial tiers are both connected and divided by a central horizontal line (Descriptive Geometry & Drawing) a constructive line, either drawn or imagined, which passes through the point of sight, and is the chief line in the projection upon which all verticals are fixed, and upon which all vanishing points are found.

See also: Horizontal
, asserting a symmetry fraught with social implications.

This time around, the formula has been further simplified and generalized: Documenting, Becher style, the morphological range of the bandshells that she encountered in parks throughout California and the Midwest, Bernard leaves both the audience area and the stage empty, shifting the focus to a form of civic architecture. From a 1928 World War I memorial, the Battell Park Band Shelter in Mishawaka, Indiana Mishawaka (IPA: [ˈmɪʃ.ʌ.ˌwɒ.kʌ]) is a city on the St. Joseph river and a twin city of South Bend in St. Joseph County, Indiana, United States. The population was 46,557 at the 2000 census. , to the 1996 Metrostage in Manitowoc, Wisconsin Manitowoc (/ˈmæ.nɪ.to.ˌwak/) is the county seat of Manitowoc County, Wisconsin. The city is located on Lake Michigan at the mouth of the Manitowoc River. , the bandshells shelter the players but also serve as a rudimentary amplification technology, one that is simultaneously shaped by scientific understanding and stylistic trends. Reduced to a consistent, diminutive scale, they can be seen as diagrams for how sound works, architectonic ar·chi·tec·ton·ic   also ar·chi·tec·ton·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to architecture or design.

2. Having qualities, such as design and structure, that are characteristic of architecture:
 analogues of the famous pebble dropped into a pool of still water, even as they undergo all the formal permutations of loudspeaker design.

These compositions elegantly overcome the pointed discrepancy between what a photograph is and what it is "of." Sitting atop the horizon line that bisects each image, the bandshells conflate con·flate  
tr.v. con·flat·ed, con·flat·ing, con·flates
1. To bring together; meld or fuse: "The problems [with the biopic] include . .
 the perspectival recession of the visual with the eddying projection of the aural. As the silence that is germane ger·mane  
adj.
Being both pertinent and fitting. See Synonyms at relevant.



[Middle English germain, having the same parents, closely connected; see german2.
 to the medium becomes figurally pervaded with sound, it gives way to an aesthetic that is autonomous, in that it resists translation into words, but is not apolitical a·po·lit·i·cal  
adj.
1. Having no interest in or association with politics.

2. Having no political relevance or importance: claimed that the President's upcoming trip was purely apolitical.
. Like Bernard's earlier photographs, these position the viewer not to one side or the other so much as right in between: between production and reception, picture and sound, the aesthetic and the social--at the very sites where culture is negotiated.
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Title Annotation:LOS ANGELES; sound art
Author:Tumlir, Jan
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:565
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