Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,607,059 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

DAISY YOUNGBLOOD.


MCKEE GALLERY

Among the different streams of American art in the '80s - the glamorous resurgence of painting, the media- and society-related photo work, the post-Pop, the post-Concept, the neo-geo, the Parisian or Frankfurtian or Benjaminian theorizing - Daisy Youngblood's sculpture filled a peculiarly quiet niche. Made of low-fired clay, sometimes combined with found objects - sticks, teeth, hair - these small heads and torsos of people and animals worked their obvious fragility and hollowness to strong effect: The clay was all too clearly a brittle skin around a void. That empty interior was blackly visible in openings at the eye sockets and at the sites of missing limbs, for Youngblood seemed to have an aversion to shaping arms and legs; she might supply one in the form of a desiccated des·ic·cate  
v. des·ic·cat·ed, des·ic·cat·ing, des·ic·cates

v.tr.
1. To dry out thoroughly.

2. To preserve (foods) by removing the moisture. See Synonyms at dry.

3.
 stick or seamlessly seal the gap, but she might also just leave a hole. Small wonder that the writing on her work often turned on morbidity and mortality Morbidity and Mortality can refer to:
  • Morbidity & Mortality, a term used in medicine
  • Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a medical publication
See also
  • Morbidity, a medical term
  • Mortality, a medical term
. By her own account, Youngblood has had a conflicted relationship with the 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
 art world, and does not exhibit here often. (She now lives in New Mexico.) This show of a dozen-odd works made over twenty years, including several newer pieces in silver and bronze, was a chance for New Yorkers to catch up.

Thin clay, so easily breakable, gives Youngblood's work a precarious psychic tension. It also looks ageless - ambiguously old and new - and its millennia-long association with pots and other vessels contributes to the metaphoric suggestiveness of her hollow torsos that, deprived of limbs, instead become biomorphic containers. (The works in metal lose some of these qualities and get more ordinary.) Representational and figurative, Youngblood's sculpture benefits from the pluralism of post-'70s art, but even among those anything-goes modes it seems deliberately atavistic at·a·vism  
n.
1. The reappearance of a characteristic in an organism after several generations of absence, usually caused by the chance recombination of genes.

2. An individual or a part that exhibits atavism.
. None of her animals - not gorilla or hawk, certainly, nor even donkey or horse - are commonplace in the lives of today's urban art audience, and she seems to see in them an innate melancholia MELANCHOLIA, med. jur. A name given by the ancients to a species of partial intellectual mania, now more generally known by the name of monomania. (q.v.) It bore this name because it was supposed to be always attended by dejection of mind and gloomy ideas. Vide Mania., , so that her sculpture suggests a requiem for the natural world. The shapes she finds for the animal forms, too, smoothed and clarified yet modeled with great subtlety, recall prehistoric cave art in their mysterious fusion of simplicity and 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.
. It is as if Youngblood were trying to translate the paintings of Lascaux into three dimensions, using a low-tech method and the most ancient of materials. This impression is reinforced by her human figures and heads: Some are highly individuated portraits (the most remarkable one here, her 1982 study of the art dealer Richard Bellamy, is highly stylized styl·ize  
tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es
1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style.

2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize.
, yet anyone who knew Bellamy would instantly recognize him); others, however, such as Roberta, 1987, may or may not resemble a model but are in any case made distinctly troglodytic trog·lo·dyte  
n.
1.
a. A member of a fabulous or prehistoric race of people that lived in caves, dens, or holes.

b. A person considered to be reclusive, reactionary, out of date, or brutish.

2.
a.
.

These traits would seem to link Youngblood's sculpture to a "primitivism primitivism, in art, the style of works of self-trained artists who develop their talents in a fanciful and fresh manner, as in the paintings of Henri Rousseau and Grandma Moses. " that dates back a full century in modern art, although as far as I know, she has never acknowledged such a connection in her occasional statements. Her own references are to her studies of Jung and of Buddhism - in fact she speaks of "correlating worldwide religions and esoteric practices with the individual psyche." Perhaps her work falls into a similar register as the attempts at mythic archetype archetype (är`kĭtīp') [Gr. arch=first, typos=mold], term whose earlier meaning, "original model," or "prototype," has been enlarged by C. G. Jung and by several contemporary literary critics.  in the wolves and birds of another self-professed Jungian, Jackson Pollock, in his paintings of the early '40s. Youngblood's writing does tend to sweeping statements - "Horses," she says, "have to do with Mars energy, creativity in its physical work aspect" - and she has called her work process "cooking down to essence," a vocabulary somewhat discredited these days, when no one believes in essences or the idea that any animal species should be associated with a particular spiritual quality. Look at the work itself, though, and you may think again: the tiny clay Hawk Head of 1999, only two inches high, is a mournful distillation of ferocity.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Frankel, David
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 1999
Words:637
Previous Article:MUNRO GALLOWAY.
Next Article:ANDREW EHRENWORTH.
Topics:



Related Articles
Daisy Youngblood.
Visiting Eden.
TOGETHER AGAIN YOUNGBLOOD JOINS SLATER IN HALL.
Contemporary Ceramics.
NEIGHBORS UPSET AT LIGHT SENTENCE.
Bush announces `intent to nominate' former New Mexico Attorney General Harold Stratton as CPSC chairman.
Gerry Schum.
Pre-hearing conference set on daisy gun matter.
FRUITED PLAINS RETURNING TO VALLEY.
SHERIFF SPELLS OUT PRIORITIES STAFFING, GANGS, JAILS TOP LIST FOR KERN COUNTY'S TOP COP.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles