DIANA COOPER.POSTMASTERS Diana Cooper's new show had something for everyone. For that side of you that loves chaotic dispersions, there was installation; for those who prefer the lure of the autonomous object, there was a little painting. Many of the works are grounded m the medium of drawing; others utilize the two-dimensional surface as a kind of launchpad for wildly aggregating networks of pipe cleaners, paper chains, catheters, and tinfoil tinfoil, n See foil, tin. tinfoil substitute, n See substitute, tinfoil. . The show was genuinely pleasurable to look at, but satisfaction could also be derived from how effortlessly Cooper's work seems to occupy the space between process and the pictorial. Executed in ballpoint pen and colored marker on paper or unstretched canvas stapled to the wall, the drawings are composed of patterns of proliferating lines, shapes, and doodles Doodles can mean the following:
Complete path or combination of interconnected paths for electron flow in a computer. Computer circuits are binary in concept, having only two possible states. diagrams, or architectural plans. But that makes them sound too serious, when in fact there is a tremendous sense of play in these endlessly multiplying forms. Sometimes the drawings are embellished with pieces of felt and transparent plastic tubing (Memory Loss, 1998-99) or brightly colored pom-poms (To Do, 1999). Words might also be incorporated, appearing in lists, as random ephemera e·phem·er·a n. A plural of ephemeron. ephemera Noun, pl items designed to last only for a short time, such as programmes or posters Noun 1. , or as part of amusing, self-referential comments. Decipherable in the densely stacked lines of While You Were Out, 1999, for example, is the eponymous e·pon·y·mous adj. Of, relating to, or constituting an eponym. [From Greek ep numos; see eponym. block text of a phone-message
pad combined with the artist's handwriting to read, "WHILE YOU
WERE OUT, I made this picture and you were out for a very long
time."
Cooper's larger constructions spill over Verb 1. spill over - overflow with a certain feeling; "The children bubbled over with joy"; "My boss was bubbling over with anger" bubble over, overflow seethe, boil - be in an agitated emotional state; "The customer was seething with anger" 2. into the viewer's space, like The Dispenser, 1999, a mixed-media construction that seems to have generated the paper cubes and transparent blue cylinders that lie scattered on the floor in front of it. The pipe cleaners that make up the undulating red-and-white grid of And I Couldn't Find You, 1998-99, extend out into space and are anchored to the floor, creating a pictorial effect and then subverting it. The artist's works meander meander Extreme U-bend in a stream, usually occurring in a series, that is caused by flow characteristics of the water. Meanders form in stream-deposited sediments and may stack up upstream of an obstruction, resulting in a gooseneck or extremely bowed meander. and expand incrementally, evoking Yoni yoni In Hinduism, a representation of the female sexual organ and feminine generative power, the symbol of the goddess Shakti (see shakti). The yoni is often associated with the phallic linga, the symbol of the god Shiva. Friedman's "space-grid-frame" renderings. Set a few feet in front of the gallery wall, Safe, 1998-99. constructed mainly from foam-core, allows entry from behind into a narrow space with just enough room for the viewer and a pile of soft white pompoms. As much as it evokes a personal haven, Safe is too cold and wobbly to provide a lasting sense of refuge. Cooper's flirtation with architecture and pathos in Safe is representative of her awareness of numerous sources--arte povera, lo-fi aesthetics, Mike Kelley Mike Kelley could refer to:
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numos; see eponym.
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