Corin Sworn: ZieherSmith.Children's playgrounds have long been characterized by a combination of artificial materials, intense colors, and oversize o·ver·size n. 1. A size that is larger than usual. 2. An oversize article or object. adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized Larger in size than usual or necessary. Adj. 1. geometric forms, making them natural subjects for an artist interested in the flows of influence among Minimalist sculpture, civic architecture, and social anthropology. Canadian Corin Sworn, who made her New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of debut at ZieherSmith recently, begins with just such a preoccupation but narrows her focus still further. Sworn concentrates on structures built in the late 1960s, when an intensified curiosity about the lasting significance of early human development coincided with emergent construction techniques to produce an extraordinary array of purportedly liberating--but in fact highly ordered--recreational environments. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Sworn renders examples of still-futuristic-looking playgrounds from Europe, Japan, and the United States as small, naturalistic graphite drawings, excluding backgrounds so that each image hovers in the middle of an expanse of white paper. Despite the works' dry precision--they emulate the appearance of black-and-white photographs but also have a slightly diagrammatic feel--their mood is enigmatic, occasionally even melancholic mel·an·chol·ic adj. 1. Affected with or being subject to melancholy. 2. Of or relating to melancholia. . Tiny prepubescent prepubescent /pre·pu·bes·cent/ (pre?pu-bes´ent) prepubertal. pre·pu·bes·cent adj. Of or characteristic of prepuberty. n. A prepubescent child. figures populate each sheet, some appearing purposeful, others lost. Clambering clam·ber·ing adj. Of or relating to a plant, often one without tendrils, that sprawls or climbs. through serpentine networks of tubing or hefting colossal inflatable globes, they might be the subjects of some mysterious test administered by unseen researchers of dubious intent. Interspersed between the playground drawings are drawings of David Vetter, a Texan who died at age twelve in 1984. Vetter was the victim of a rare genetic condition known as Severe Combined Immune Deficiency Syndrome, an "allergy to everything" that condemned him to an isolated life in a sterile environment. His situation encapsulated a range of contemporaneous anxieties, attracting intense media attention that transformed his nickname, "The Boy in the Bubble Bubble boy, boy in the bubble and boy in the plastic bubble are colloquialisms used to describe a person who must live in a sterile environment for medical reasons. ," into an enduring pop-cultural trope trope n. 1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor. 2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies. . The visual and thematic parallels between the absolute artificiality of Vetter's germ-free home and the playgrounds' overdesigned scenarios aren't hard to discern, but the pattern of attitudes that Sworn's project suggests--toward the psychology and sociology of medical technology, the mass media, and the built environment--is more ambiguous. There is clearly an element of nostalgia at work here, but it's tempered by a critical interest in the visual manifestations of modern and postmodern bureaucracy that is shared by Liam Gillick, Nils Norman, and others. Ultimately, what Sworn's drawings illustrate is an oscillation between--or Orwellian fusion of--freedom and slavery, a paradoxical state for which the repurposed tangle of cables depicted in Italy, 1971, (all works 2005), and the open but carefully marked-out playing field of U.S.A., 1970, are graphic analogies. And while her investigation has yet to approach the breadth or sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. of Gillick's or Norman's (to be fair, Sworn is considerably younger than either artist), it achieves a lasting resonance with modest means. In fact, if there's an obvious formal flaw in these works, it's that they're too unassuming. Unframed, slightly dog-eared, and arranged (apart from one pair, on an opposite wall) in an amorphous cluster, they work only if the viewer is prepared to squint squint: see strabismus. and could easily disappear into the background of a less-sympathetic context. More strident is Hop Scotch, 1970 France, a large silk-screened banner based on an updated design for the traditional children's game. Its heraldic he·ral·dic adj. Of or relating to heralds or heraldry. he·ral di·cal·ly adv.Adj. 1. styling alludes less directly to a specific time and place, allowing for a freer meditation on functionality and abstraction than the drawings do. Sworn's work mines a rich vein and her technical facility is clear; her next move--hop, skip, or jump--will be one worth watching. --MW |
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