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Ed Ruscha. (Reviews: New York).


GAGOSIAN GALLERY

Several gallery shows during the past year have testified to the late foundering of many of the original Pop artists, but Ed Ruscha's most recent appearance in New York proved a significant exception. The artist's show included work that was smart and pertinent, a vintage distilled over forty years. Rather than recycle the ideas or motifs of '60s Pop art, Ruscha has pressed forward, experimenting with methods for making Pop a cognitive or perceptual game.

Ten large canvases hanging in the main gallery adhered to a generally consistent model: The image of a mountain was doubled, like a Rorschach blot, mirroring itself on opposite sides of the canvas. Stretching across each work, over the "two" mountains, was a stenciled phrase that was also, in most cases, "mirrored" because it was a palindrome palindrome: see anagram. .

Mountain imagery has always served as a visual shorthand for the sublime, from the pantheist pan·the·ism  
n.
1. A doctrine identifying the Deity with the universe and its phenomena.

2. Belief in and worship of all gods.



pan
 canvases of Caspar David Friedrich Caspar David Friedrich (September 5, 1774 – May 7, 1840) was a 19th century German Romantic painter, considered by many critics to be one of the finest representatives of the movement. Life
Caspar David Friedrich was born in Greifswald, Hither Pomerania.
 and the Catskills of the Hudson River School Hudson River school, group of American landscape painters, working from 1825 to 1875. The 19th-century romantic movements of England, Germany, and France were introduced to the United States by such writers as Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper.  to Ansel Adams's photographs of the Rockies. Mountains, in their everyday untouchability, still seem like residences for the gods. But Ruscha resists knee-jerk spiritualism spiritualism: see spiritism.
spiritualism

Belief that the souls of the dead can make contact with the living, usually through a medium or during abnormal mental states such as trances.
 (and, one might argue, his own often mentioned dormant Catholicism) by emblazoning em·bla·zon  
tr.v. em·bla·zoned, em·bla·zon·ing, em·bla·zons
1.
a. To adorn (a surface) richly with prominent markings: emblazon a doorway with a coat of arms.

b.
 slogans that render the scenes absurd. Paintings like Porch Crop, 2001, Never Odd or Even, 2001, and Lion in Oil, 2002, read like cryptic messages coined and coded by military intelligence units. Others, like Tulsa Slut, 2002, Solo Gigolos, 2002, Sex at Noon Taxes, 2002, were consciously racier, conjuring adult film titles--but still disjointedly absurd, working against the majesty of their backgrounds in the same way porn makes a mockery out of narrative. A third set of paintings ditched the palindrome for ad slogan, as in Leroy's Welding, 2002, or for Old West epitaph, as in one canvas with a text reading

CLARENCE JONES, 1906-1987, REALLY KNEW HOW TO SHARPEN KNIVES.

The commercial and folksy folk·sy  
adj. folk·si·er, folk·si·est Informal
1. Simple and unpretentious in behavior.

2. Characterized by informality and affability: a friendly, folksy town.

3.
 sound of "Leroy's welding" and "Tulsa slut" pointed to the lingering vestiges of Pop art in Ruscha's work. In a second room were more cognition ticklers that nodded to Rene Magritte. Palindromes were paired with images of open, blank-paged books in the paintings Tulsa Slut Book and A Sun on USA Book (both 2002); other canvases, like Atlas, Manual, and Annual Report (all 2002), toyed with the functional-iconic nature of specific words and texts. In many ways, Ruscha headed here into the heavy-duty art-and-language territory of Americans like Joseph Kosuth and Lawrence Weiner--or, with the paintings' natural backdrops, the Scottish artist Hamish Fulton. Focusing not just on words or images, he contrasted divergent visual modes: textual versus imagistic signs, iconography versus semiology se·mi·ol·o·gy also se·mei·ol·o·gy  
n.
1.
a. The science that deals with signs or sign language.

b. The use of signs in signaling, as with a semaphore.

2. Symptomatology.
, looking versus reading. And his actual artist's books, in which he bleached the titles off found books (like The Mery Wives of Windsor and The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius), signaled a different typ e of intervention--appropriation, absence, erasure--while still showing the artist's giddy irreverence toward the ironclad ironclad, mid-19th-century wooden warship protected from gunfire by iron armor. The success of the ironclad when first employed by the French in the Crimean War sparked a naval armor and armaments race between France and Great Britain.  authority of words, objects, and images.
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Author:Schwendener, Martha
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2002
Words:488
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