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Claude Wampler.


P. S. 122

One of the more interesting performances this season was Claude Wampler's Blanket, The Surface of Her, not only because this thirty-one-year-old artist comes to the stage with training in numerous performance techniques - ballet, Butoh Butoh (舞踏 butō) , opera, acting - but also because she knows obsessively well the work of her peers in contemporary art. The result was a polished, ninety-minute work that is truly of the moment in the way it captures the aesthetic mood of the present, particularly its high-fashion photographic quality and its languorous lan·guor  
n.
1. Lack of physical or mental energy; listlessness. See Synonyms at lethargy.

2. A dreamy, lazy mood or quality: "It was hot, yet with a sweet languor about it" 
 sexuality.

The concept behind Blanket began with a device that could have been disastrous; Wampler invited eight others whose work fascinated her - Aphex Twin/Richard D. James, Sylvie Fleury Swiss contemporary pop artist employing sculpture, mixed media. Her work addresses the issues of shopping, and the paradigm of the new age. Born 1961, Geneva. Her works which critics have labeled post-appropriationist are featured internationally, as are her books , Richard Foreman Richard Foreman (born in New York on 10 June 1937) is a playwright and avant-garde theater pioneer; he is the founder of the Ontological-Hysteric Theater. Life
He graduated from Brown University (B.A. 1959), and received a MFA in Playwriting from Yale Drama School in 1962.
, Richard Kern, Paul McCarthy, Julia Scher, Romaine Slocombe, and Viktor & Rolf - to tell her what to do for ten minutes each. She imagined they would use her actor's body as an empty vessel for their ideas, and that, strung together, the performance would unfold like an "exquisite corpse" the live equivalent to the Surrealists' favorite literary game of chance. Few of them responded with more than a one-liner: "Bend spoons like Yuri Geller" (Foreman); "Piss onstage" (Kern); or "Get down on your knees and bark like a dog" (McCarthy), which is exactly what she did (except in the case of the bending spoons), resulting in images of a startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 intensity. Sylvie Fleury sent a gold-lame hair dryer from Switzerland and photographer Romaine Slocombe asked to see her videotapes, and they "talked a lot on the phone." Only Viktor & Rolf, a Dutch team of fashion designers, scripted their ten minutes. They made a dress to measure, gave makeup and styling instructions, specified lighting, and sent a videotape that would run simultaneously with her performance. They also added their own aural byline, a recording that very slowly repeated, "Viktor and Rolf . . . Viktor and Rolf," every two minutes.

Wampler's talent lay in her canny ability to translate the spirit of each artist's aesthetic into evocative live performance. As sexually insistent as a Pasolini movie, as glossy and hyperreal Hyperreal may refer to:
  • Hyperreality, a term used in semiotics and postmodern philosophy
  • Hyperrealism, a school of painting
  • Hyperreal numbers, an extension of the real numbers in mathematics that are used in non-standard analysis
 as an Inez van Lamsweerde Inez van Lamsweerde (b. September 25, 1963 in Amsterdam, Netherlands) is a Dutch fashion photographer known for her subversive approach to fashion and art photography. She recently won second prize in the portraits singles category of the World Press Photo contest for a photograph  photograph, each tightly constructed vignette was a checklist of current fixations: violence, bodily functions, gender, race, and the music of youth culture. Her interpretation of Foreman, another important influence, was an image-rich homage to a highly visual and ribald rib·ald  
adj.
Characterized by or indulging in vulgar, lewd humor.

n.
A vulgar, lewdly funny person.



[From Middle English ribaud, ribald person, from Old French, from
 director, and her theatrical imagination even ran to a dramatic memorial to the end of classicism classicism, a term that, when applied generally, means clearness, elegance, symmetry, and repose produced by attention to traditional forms. It is sometimes synonymous with excellence or artistic quality of high distinction. ; wearing a gown of Prussian blue Prussian blue, pigment widely used for laundry bluing, in dyeing compounds, and in the manufacture of inks and paints. Several varieties are known, one of which consists of the chemical compound ferric ferrocyanide. , perched on a high pedestal, and accompanied by a pianist, Wampler sang an aria in vain as Richard D. James' techno music blasted the sound of her voice to bits and left the musician's hands foundering silently at the keyboard.

Blanket marks a crossroads in Wampler's relatively young solo career, and it will be interesting to see which of several possible paths she takes. Her performances have mostly been limited to vivid, single gestures; in Knit Tease, 1996, she unraveled the knitted dress she was wearing and reknittted it - a process that took three to four hours. In Vertical Smile, 1996, she goosed viewers as they bent over to peer at a video screen behind a peephole installed in a gallery. With Blanket, her most theatrically structured work to date, she occupied a far larger stage; it will be intriguing to see how she fills it.

- RoseLee Goldberg
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:performance at the P.S. 122, New York
Author:Goldberg, RoseLee
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Sep 1, 1997
Words:556
Previous Article:Mimi Smith. (art exhibit at the Anna Kustera Gallery, New York)
Next Article:Manuel Neri. (art exhibit at the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D.C.)
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