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David Hammons: Zwirner & Wirth.


Everyone I asked about the Miles Davis Noun 1. Miles Davis - United States jazz musician; noted for his trumpet style (1926-1991)
Miles Dewey Davis Jr., Davis
 painting that was included in this year's Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of recent American art, typically by young and lesser known artists, on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, USA. The event began as an annual exhibition in 1918. , a lively Basquiatesque oil on canvas from 1991 titled RU Legal, immediately assured me that it was actually "by" or an "intervention of" David Hammons David Hammons (born 1943) is an African-American artist mostly known for his works in and around New York City during the 1970s and 1980s.

Much of his work, including Spade with Chains (1973), reflects his commitment to the civil rights and Black Power movements.
, as if this "solved" how or why this painting came to be displayed. While I have no interest in refuting the contention that the painting appeared at Hammons's behest, I have a lot of interest in what such an appearance and its attendant obfuscation ob·fus·cate  
tr.v. ob·fus·cat·ed, ob·fus·cat·ing, ob·fus·cates
1. To make so confused or opaque as to be difficult to perceive or understand: "A great effort was made . . .
 might mean. Hammons's name is not listed in any museum materials or in the Biennial catalogue. Described variously as "elusive," "enigmatic," and a "trickster trickster, a mythic figure common among Native North Americans, South Americans, and Africans. Usually male but occasionally female or disguised in female form, he is notorious for exaggerated biological drives and well-endowed physique; partly divine, partly human, ," certainly a scholar of irony's mise en abyme Mise en abyme (also mise en abîme) has several meanings in the realm of the creative arts and literary theory. The term is originally from the French and means, "placing into infinity" or "placing into the abyss".  (call it that old black magic), Hammons moves by feints and dodges. So while his "participation" in the Biennial could be seen as, I guess, a curatorial coup, it could just as easily reveal that the sport is at the organizers' expense: The purposely recalcitrant and unverifiable gesture leaves them with rumormongering and a painting, not by Hammons, which seems to ask anyone looking into it, RU4 Real?

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The eleven works in the recent Hammons show at Zwirner & Wirth ranged from Untitled, 1987, a basketball hoop and backboard back·board
n.
1. A board placed under or behind something to provide firmness or support.

2. A board placed beneath the body of a person with an injury to the neck or back, used especially in transporting the person in such a way
 mosaicked in bottle caps with bottle-cap and Super Ball extensions to Untitled (Basketball Drawing), 2004, which is played as much as drawn by "dribbling" a basketball on paper to generate a dynamic abstraction. The drawing in its gilded gild 1  
tr.v. gild·ed or gilt , gild·ing, gilds
1. To cover with or as if with a thin layer of gold.

2. To give an often deceptively attractive or improved appearance to.

3.
 frame slants out from the wall, a found suitcase stashed behind it, complicating both its economy and its stability. Since the exhibition was allegedly put together without him, Hammons's nonparticipation, while not necessarily confounding confounding

when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies.


confounding factor
 everything, becomes an issue when one considers Basketball Installation, 1995, which consists of a tree trunk, partially painted white and supporting a white basketball hoop, an African vessel housing a basketball, and scuff marks radiating across the white wall. Since there are photos in existence of Hammons himself installing similar wall drawings, by repeatedly bouncing the basketball, what does it mean for someone else to have played the game? Hammons aficionados have been reluctant to admit that he might play conceptual tag-team with Sol LeWitt Sol LeWitt (September 9, 1928 - April 8, 2007) was an American artist linked to various movements including conceptual art and minimalism. His media were predominantly painting, drawing, and structures (a term he preferred in opposition to sculpture). , but, occasioned by forces willing to profit without him, the wall marks put a new spin on "nothing but net."

When quizzed, a gallery employee said she knew nothing of the Miles Davis painting and hadn't seen Hammons's recent "Unauthorized Retrospective," a sly but significant survey organized by Triple Candie that included none of the artist's actual work but rather one hundred or so photocopies and computer printouts taken from previously published catalogues, exhibition brochures, and existing websites of his body-prints, sculptures, drawings, performances, and installations. Was it due to absence (of actual work) italicizing unauthorization that the Triple Candie exhibition provided more critical traction than this tonier show?

While the artist himself has positioned his work "somewhere between Marcel Duchamp, outsider art, and arte povera," it might be time to consider his connections to other contexts: His career begins in Los Angeles, the city of Ed Kienholz and Wallace Berman, themselves no strangers to street finds, in a moment immediately following Marcia Tucker's "Anti-Illusion: Procedures / Materials" at the Whitney Museum of American Art Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York City, founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. It was an outgrowth of the Whitney Studio (1914–18), the Whitney Studio Club (1918–28), and the Whitney Studio Galleries (1928–30).  in 1969, as well as the more local "Projections: Anti-Materialism" at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego This article is about Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. For other Museums named Museum of Contemporary Art, see Museum of Contemporary Art.

The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (or MCASD
 in La Jolla in 1970, which included Barry Le Va's infamous Velocity Piece #2 (Impact Run). As much as Hammons can be seen to have occulted such procedures and materials, he has also abstracted them into the realm of the vernacular. Consider his Cigarette Holder, 1990, a wall-based sculpture of cigarette butts "roach-clipped" to twists and curves of wire, as a response to Richard Tuttle's wire pieces. Le Va left only marks from his shoes on the floor, bits of skin and blood, and the sound of his body running and thudding against the walls he ran between. Is it possible that Hammons saw and heard in this sculpture the athletic poetics of hoops as well as aesthetics on the run; provocation to leave his own bodily traces; and a way of exceeding and/or escaping containment for other reasons and impacts?
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Author:Hainley, Bruce
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:698
Previous Article:The 2006 Whitney Biennial: Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.(art exhibitions)
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