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Dennis Oppenheim.


"A toy is a child's first initiation to art," Charles Baudelaire once claimed; conversely, art could be the adult's swan song to toys. There's an area where the tendrils Tendrils is an irregular collaboration between noted Australian guitarists, Joel Silbersher and Charlie Owen (musician). A difficult sound to describe, Tendrils features two seemingly chaotic but strangely melodic and complementary, guitar parts and occasionally stripped back  of the ludic lu·dic  
adj.
Of or relating to play or playfulness: "Fiction . . . now makes [language]
 wrap around the roots of the esthetic, and that's precisely where Dennis Oppenheim works. Ranging from the little art experiments he did with his kids in the '70s to the sculptures in his latest exhibition, Oppenheim has created a body of works that comprise his own little Land of the Misfit Toys. For instance, Think Tank, 1993, is half Cat in the Hat, half a passionately staged Gomez Addams toy-train wreck: two choo-choos circumnavigate cir·cum·nav·i·gate  
tr.v. cir·cum·nav·i·gat·ed, cir·cum·nav·i·gat·ing, cir·cum·nav·i·gates
1. To proceed completely around: circumnavigating the earth.

2.
 the brims of giant (nearly six-foot-tall), brightorange top hats that rest on the floor at slight angles so that the trains chug (jargon) chug - To run slowly; to grind or grovel. "The disk is chugging like crazy."  away on the inclines but plummet perilously on the slopes. As a resounding re·sound  
v. re·sound·ed, re·sound·ing, re·sounds

v.intr.
1. To be filled with sound; reverberate: The schoolyard resounded with the laughter of children.

2.
 clackety-clack-clack fills the air and cheap metaphors for celebration flash through your mind, you can't help but find yourself hoping for the little trains to jump their tracks and smack into one another.

Playthings, of course, are supposed to be utterly safe, straight, and happy, whereas Oppenheim is sort of like the character in David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers who makes gynecological gynecological /gy·ne·co·log·i·cal/ (-kah-loj´i-k'l) gynecologic.  instruments too insane to be properly functional: he starts out with a playful idea, but pushes it to such an extreme that it comes off as dangerous, twisted, or creepy. In Galloping Through the Wheat, 1992, wild horses with long, sharp blades for hooves trample a big loaf of what looks like foam Wonderbread, ruthlessly shredding it (and, by implication, white-bread America) into ever smaller chunks. In Untitled, 1993, three huge plaster busts huddle together in a corner around a pile of brown ears, blue eyes, and black noses that have presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 fallen off their faces. No matter how you read this work (Communication breakdown? A critique of alienation? An allegory of the senses? A loss of sense?), in the end you're still left with the impression that these busts could just be spooky Mr. Potato Heads that someone got tired of playing with and/or didn't care to put back together.

Oppenheim's works rarely allow for neat and tidy interpretations. The installation Blue Tattoo, 1992--93, presents a baffling chain of physical links: tea pots shoot steam into the nostrils of a small mechanized mech·a·nize  
tr.v. mech·a·nized, mech·a·niz·ing, mech·a·niz·es
1. To equip with machinery: mechanize a factory.

2.
 bull as it paws the ground with its leg; its shoulder is engraved en·grave  
tr.v. en·graved, en·grav·ing, en·graves
1. To carve, cut, or etch into a material: engraved the champion's name on the trophy.

2.
 with a heart to which is affixed a blue light and a camera that sends an image of the heart to a projector; the projector beams it to a large glove suspended from the ceiling, covered with the words "mother" and "sister." Roland Barthes once wrote that toys mirror the objects of the adult world and thus prepare kids to assume social roles unquestioningly. Oppenheim's works function in exactly the opposite way: in both their semantic play and their formal mischievousness, they mirror the spirit of toys that aren't mass-produced, but cobbled together out of old cardboard boxes and castaway clothes.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1993, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Reviews; exhibit at Blum Helman
Author:Seward, Keith
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Nov 1, 1993
Words:500
Previous Article:Leon Golub/Nancy Spero. (exhibit at Josh Baer Gallery)(Reviews)
Next Article:Rona Pondick. (exhibit at Jose Freire Fine Arts)(Reviews)
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