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EAST INTERNATIONAL 2000.


NORWICH GALLERY/NORWICH SCHOOL OF ART AND DESIGN

Norwich, East Anglia's bijou cathedral city, became a potential death trap this summer. Patrick Bateman wannabes had only to visit EAST International and invest in Simon Tegala's specially devised limited-edition piece, Murder with Impunity, 2000. This clearly signed, wickedly sharp, painfully trendy kitchen knife comes with a contract licensing buyers to do their worst, with Tegala committed to shoulder blame for "any indictable in·dict·a·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of being indicted: Evidence suggested that the official was indictable for the crime.

2.
 proceedings in relation to the Act." His conceptual Grand Guignol practically hemorrhages issues: the artist as immoralist im·mor·al·ist  
n.
An advocate of immorality.
 or redeemer; the power of money; the buying, selling, and "stealing" of human life; the nature of responsibility; the acte gratuit; the definition of "incitement"; the operation of laws; the dispensation of justice (an incomplete list). It's a smart, urgent piece in an absorbing, tendentious exhibition.

Drawing an average 1,200 entries annually, open-submission EAST International is staged in the Norwich Gallery and the roomy studios of the Norwich School of Art and Design, enabling some provocative display tactics. This year, News of the World, 1999, Lyn Lowenstein's alarmingly topical fake newspaper hoardings, adorned the school's railings (headlines included "SEMEN RUBBED ON BOYS' BODIES ENCOURAGES GROWTH" and "STRAIGHT SEX CAUSES BRITTLE BONES"). A Guide to Healthy Living, 1999, Frances Goodman's staccato lists of paranoid hygiene warnings ("Do not touch the latch of a public toilet," "Do not let other people breathe on you in a public toilet," etc.), appeared on stickers in lavatory stalls. This year's selectors were Sebastian Lopez, director of the Gate Foundation (the Amsterdam-based organization that showcases non-Western contemporary art) and artist Keith Piper. Prioritizing "subject matter," their selection emphasized artists mining the big seams--embodiment, morality, sexuality, post-identity pol itics, diasporic experience, colonial pasts and postcolonial presents--with originality, bite, 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.
. Inevitably, some works were easily knowable, recycling cliched devices: Carl Jaycock's screen-printed patchworks mingling fragments of old maps and faded photographs, or Ajamu's superimposition of his own face onto early anthropological photographs (the non-Western other as freakish freak·ish  
adj.
1. Markedly unusual or abnormal; strange: freakish weather; a freakish combination of styles.

2. Relating to or being a freak: a freakish extra toe.
 spectacle). But many boasted real originality, bite, and sophistication. Erika Tan's installation East, 2000, achieved the fiendishly fiend·ish  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or suggestive of a fiend; diabolical.

2. Extremely wicked or cruel.

3. Extremely bad, disagreeable, or difficult:
 tricky feat of melding beauty and critique. Bamboo cages, porcelain jars, spills of fragrant jasmine tea, piped bird song, chintz chintz (chĭnts) [probably Hindustani,=variegated], originally a painted or stained calico from India. Esteemed for its bright colors and designs, it was used in Europe for bedcovers and draperies.  wallpaper, and tea chests stenciled with ornithological drawings paralleled the naturalization naturalization, official act by which a person is made a national of a country other than his or her native one. In some countries naturalized persons do not necessarily become citizens but may merely acquire a new nationality.  of non-indigenous birds in Europe (pheasants, goldfinches) with the Orient's enrichment of European culture. Beautifully judged, East marked through omission the terrible divide between the West's love affair with Chinese culture and its actual conduct toward the Ch inese--not least its treatment of immigrants.

Two artists shared EAST International 2000's prize of [pound]5,000 ([pound]7,500). Jananne Al-Ani's five-monitor video work, A Loving Man, 1996, shows the faces of the artist, her mother, and her three sisters playing the old memory game in which turns are taken repeating, and adding to, a list. Here, the phrases spoken are reflections on their experience of estrangement from the "loving man" of the title, the husband and father parted from his family both by personal and political changes; but the players laugh involuntarily as they flub (language) FLUB - The abstract machine for bootstrapping STAGE2.

[Mentioned in Machine Oriented Higher Level Languages, W. van der Poel, N-H 1974, p. 271].
 their lines. Do their frowns express grief? Or memory placed under strain? A teasing gap opens up between emotion and expression: A1-Ani's serious, complex work brilliantly avoids the "confessional" mode's pitfalls. "An expression of cultural hybridity" would be the lazy description of Hew Locke's enormous installation Hemmed In, 1999, but that tired formula does the work's sheer idiosyncrasy idiosyncrasy /id·io·syn·cra·sy/ (-sing´krah-se)
1. a habit peculiar to an individual.

2. an abnormal susceptibility to an agent (e.g., a drug) peculiar to an individual.
 a deep injustice. Previously sighted at London's Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington, London, opened in 1852 as the Museum of Manufacturers at Marlborough House. It originally contained a nucleus of contemporary objects of applied art bought from the Great Exhibition of 1851 at the instigation of the , jamme d between marble columns, it's like the Bucentaur crossed with Brighton Pavilion, fantastically woven from cardboard packaging. This time, it's collapsed, unraveling, burrowing out of its studio--gorgeous, but also an encumbrance A burden, obstruction, or impediment on property that lessens its value or makes it less marketable. An encumbrance (also spelled incumbrance) is any right or interest that exists in someone other than the owner of an estate and that restricts or impairs the transfer of the estate or , a kind of Gregor-the-cockroach object that exceeds description: titanic stuff.
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Author:Withers, Rachel
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Oct 1, 2000
Words:623
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