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Eva Hesse: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. (Reviews).


Eva Hesse remains a strangely undecidable Undecidable has more than one meaning:

In mathematical logic:
  • A decision problem is called (recursively) undecidable if no algorithm can decide it, such as for Turing's halting problem; see also under Decidable.
 figure. Since her death at a premature age thirty-two years ago, critics and historians have been unanimous in their acclaim for her art but with little consensus as to what makes it important. Much of the debate rests, no doubt, on the fact of Hesse's too brief life and the broken record narration of her biography: Hers is a career endlessly reduced to art-historical boilerplate A phrase or body of text used verbatim in different documents such as a signature at the end of a letter. Boilerplate is widely used in the legal profession as many paragraphs are used over and over in agreements with little modification or no modification. , all morbid excess and spectacular tragedy. She has been variously treated as a protofeminist reckoning with the Art World Boys Club; a childhood survivor of the Shoah; a patron saint of female pathology; a Minimalist with guts, her work appearing to spill over with viscera viscera /vis·ce·ra/ (vis´er-ah) plural of viscus.

vis·cer·a
pl.n.
1. The soft internal organs of the body, especially those contained within the abdominal and thoracic cavities.
. Too often the work itself is seen as little more than an epiphenomenon epiphenomenon /epi·phe·nom·e·non/ (ep?i-fe-nom´e-non) an accessory, exceptional, or accidental occurrence in the course of any disease.

ep·i·phe·nom·e·non
n.
 of the life--a life caricatured in terms of victimhood and neurosis neurosis, in psychiatry, a broad category of psychological disturbance, encompassing various mild forms of mental disorder. Until fairly recently, the term neurosis was broadly employed in contrast with psychosis, which denoted much more severe, debilitating mental , even as Hesse was achieving critical success with her art.

Organized by guest curator Elisabeth Sussman, Hesse's retrospective at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) is a major modern art museum and San Francisco landmark.

It opened in 1935 under founding director Dr. Grace Morley (Grace L.
 provides a rare--and perhaps final--occasion to confront these and other controversies surrounding her work. Indeed, to hear any admirer of Hesse tell it, the significance of the show far exceeds the usual batch of claims attached to museum retrospectives. Ten years ago, the last major Hesse exhibition was mounted at the Yale University Art Gallery The Yale University Art Gallery houses a significant and encyclopedic collection of art in several buildings on the campus of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Although it embraces all cultures and periods, the Gallery possesses especially renowned collections of early , and its catalogue set an infamously morose mo·rose  
adj.
Sullenly melancholy; gloomy.



[Latin mr
 (some would say ghoulish ghoul  
n.
1. One who delights in the revolting, morbid, or loathsome.

2. A grave robber.

3. An evil spirit or demon in Muslim folklore believed to plunder graves and feed on corpses.
) tone for Hesse scholarship by stressing the most excruciating details of the artist's biography in interpreting her work: her escape from Nazi Germany as a child and the resulting temporary separation from her parents; her mother's depression and suicide; her own lifelong struggle with illness. Sussman's show begs to be seen in the context of this earlier reading as well as in light of two additional factors that directly and indirectly figure in the artist's legacy: the tenuous physical condition of Hesse's work on the one hand and recent museum politics on the other. Hesse may have exploited the notoriously fugitive properties of latex and fiberglass to produce some of the most gorgeous objects of the postwar era, but the diminishing shelf life of her art now betrays that achievement. For months there have been whispers that this was the "last chance" to see a comprehensive survey of Hesse's work before the major sculpture disintegrated. Now the situation has become that much more desperate with the cancellation of the show's only East Coast stop (the Whitney, where Sussman was previously employed and where the idea for the exhibition originated), a casualty of the post-September II economy.

All this may seem like so much art world gossip when one is confronted with the presence of Hesse's work, but it is critical to understanding the motivation behind and significance of Sussman's exhibition. The scale of the retrospective inadvertently addresses its importance: 153 objects spanning the course of some dozen galleries, resulting in the largest Hesse show ever staged. Some might complain that editing is in order--that the galleries of early paintings and works on paper are little more than a long-winded preview before one finally gets to the good stuff. Yet if we take seriously the prospect that much of this work will never be shown together again, we should welcome the opportunity to trace both the dead ends of Hesse's output as well as the extraordinary richness, weirdness, and humor of her vocabulary. It's all here: the crude, early "self-portraits" rendered in gray murk murk also mirk  
n.
Partial or total darkness; gloom.

adj. Archaic
Partially or totally dark; gloomy.



[Middle English mirke, from Old Norse myrkr
; funky, coiled assemblages produced during her stay in Kettwig, Germany, the work that effectively began Hesse's sculptural p ractice; the arid, clean-lined schemata of the machine drawings of 1965; the mid-decade breakthrough of her eccentric abstraction. Beautifully installed in the awkward galleries of SF MOMA Moma (mō`mä), town, E central Mozambique. It is important mainly as a harbor for the export of tropical produce.  (with its curved walls, Mario Botta's museum has always proved challenging), it is a well-paced exhibition, from intimately scaled rooms of early work to larger galleries revealing the full-blown denouement de·noue·ment also dé·noue·ment  
n.
1.
a. The final resolution or clarification of a dramatic or narrative plot.

b.
 of Hesse's late sculptural achievement. What we get in this unfolding is how the artist's work consistently locked horns with the prevailing currents of her day, from Abstract Expressionism to the '60s engagement with Surrealism and Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts
. For audiences who still like their artist's practice neat and tidy, the show will produce doubts, but in some ways Hesse's untidiness seems very much to the point.

It's a bit surprising, then, that as far flung as the artist's formal range may appear, the retrospective turns specifically around issues of form and media. In what seems an effort to steer clear of the biographicizing tendencies in the Hesse literature, Sussman places great stress on the formal character of the work, as if the curatorial pendulum had swung to the opposite extreme since the Yale retrospective. If Hesse's art once invited comparisons to "giant, soiled bandages"--what some historians saw as an index of the artist's long-term physical and mental problems- in this show Medium Is All. But what medium means in this context is expansive: It would appear to refer not only to the categories of painting and sculpture but also to the very materials that compose both. At first this may seem like modernist business as usual, but Sussman's gesture is essential in recovering Hesse for the history of art (as opposed to, say, the history of female neuroses). The exhibition insists on Hesse's long-standing en gagement with the question of medium, not as a blinkered blink·ered  
adj.
Subjective and limited, as in viewpoint or perception: "The characters have a blinkered view and, misinterpreting what they see, sometimes take totally inexpedient action" 
 Greenbergian by any means but as an artist bent on exploring the inevitable collision of painting, sculpture, and drawing. With its scumbled surfaces and drippy drip·py  
adj. drip·pi·er, drip·pi·est
1. Characterized by dripping; drizzly: a drippy, wet day.

2. Slang
a. Tiresome or annoying.

b.
 facture fac·ture  
n.
The manner in which something, especially a work of art, is made: "the gummy surfaces, spectral smudges and woozy contours that . . .
, Hesse's late sculpture has always been a painterly paint·er·ly  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic.

2.
a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting.

b.
 sculpture, inheriting lessons of process from Abstract Expressionism while simultaneously questioning that movement's claims to medium specificity. Nowhere is this idea better illustrated than in the witty Hang Up, 1966 A simple wood frame wrapped in strips of cloth, painted in graduated shades of gray, houses an empty space behind; a coil of wire erupts from this structure as if lasso-ing the viewer's space. What Hang Up drives home--and what could well be the mantra for Sussman's curatorial effort--is the illicit encounter between pictorial and sculptural space explored in Hesse's practice; it's a great pun on the modernist "hang up" of keeping paintings pictorial and sculptures sculptural. In the last few galleries of the exhibition, the status of the material matters because of the critical relation between process and medium so fundamental to Hesse's generation of artists. The presentation is plainspoken plain·spo·ken  
adj.
Frank; straightforward; blunt.



plainspo
 in this regard: Galleries are marked frankly by the predominant material of the work displayed ("Latex," "Fiberglass"); one room's organizing principle is simply called "Materiality as Subject."

Of course, the question of medium does affect what gets shown and how objects are ultimately exhibited; and it is clear that some hard choices were made in determining the final selection of objects (of course, this was not solely at the discretion of the curator, as some pieces were too fragile to be lent). Some major later works are striking in their absence (one thinks in particular of Contingent, 1969, and Augment, 1968), forcing us to imagine them crumbling away in a warehouse somewhere. By the same token, some sculpture that did make it into the show wears its age in equally striking ways. Only a few years back, works such as Accession II, 1967/1969, Accession III, 1968, and Repetition Nineteen III, 1968, might have been exhibited as they had been in Hesse's time; that is, directly on the floor and without the protective barrier of museum cases. Here many of Hesse's objects are enshrined in Plexi or set above the floor on relieflike stages. It's hard not to find the presentation a little distracting: Al l those extra layers of mediation significantly alter the work's figure/ground relationships, the phenomenological approach the viewer takes to the objects, as well as the decidedly unprecious quality of Hesse's best process work. (The inclusion of Dorothy Levitt Beskind's fascinating film of the artist in her studio from 1967 underscores something of the workaday aspect of the late sculpture.) But the compromised display, however sad, is sadly necessary, and it unintentionally dramatizes the question of medium for Hesse's art.

Still, one danger in taking issues of medium to a thematic extreme is that one might miss out on the historical and interpretive complexities surrounding Hesse's work. There is no reason, for instance, that Hesse's status as a woman artist working on the brink of Second Wave feminism could not be acknowledged in the course of the exhibition. (The catalogue, of course, provides far more space to explore such issues and is to be praised for its critical and historical rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
, particularly in contributions by Briony Fer and James Meyer.) Hesse's place in relation to feminism continues to be a pressing concern for her reception, and referring to it in the context of a retrospective needn't signal a descent into the vulgar psychobiography psy·cho·bi·og·ra·phy  
n. pl. psy·cho·bi·og·ra·phies
1. A biography that analyzes the psychological makeup, character, or motivations of its subject:
 that plagues the writing on her practice.

An even larger issue in Hesse criticism needs to be addressed. Scanning the wall texts from the first room to the last, one is struck by the rhetoric of dualities long used to describe her art: chaos/order, beauty/ugliness, abstraction/figuration, etc. This is standard jargon within the artist's literature (Hesse herself seemed to advocate the jolie-laide camp of art writing), and it has come to function as shorthand for the peculiar tensions her art so brilliantly suggests. What this language doesn't quite articulate is the way that Hesse's work plays on the knife-edge of the literal and the metaphoric: that her art consistently stages the very problem of interpretation in confusing the formalist grammar of the modernist object with the sticky vicissitudes vicissitudes
Noun, pl

changes in circumstance or fortune [Latin vicis change]

vicissitudes nplvicisitudes fpl; peripecias fpl 
 of bodily representation. An assemblage like 2 in 1, 1965, may recall for some various traditions of abstraction, such as the biomorphic tendencies of Surrealism; for others its forms may suggest breasts and nipples and genitalia genitalia /gen·i·ta·lia/ (jen?i-tal´e-ah) [L.] the reproductive organs.

ambiguous genitalia
. To see the piece as neces sarily one thing or the other is to miss the joke in a way. Hesse's inclusion of a tactile, mildly obscene part-object itself plays on the fetish fetish (fĕt`ĭsh), inanimate object believed to possess some magical power. The fetish may be a natural thing, such as a stone, a feather, a shell, or the claw of an animal, or it may be artificial, such as carvings in wood.  for opticality within modernist abstraction just as much as the work revels in its confusion of the painterly and the sculptural.

In spite of these shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
, the SF MOMA exhibition represents the necessary historical response to an earlier moment in Hesse's reception. There's no hyperbole in calling this a major show, at once ambitious in its display and acute in its focus. For the next go at it, some middle path between the traumatic excesses of previous criticism and the medium-based concentration of Sussman's Hesse seems the logical step. Given the critical, nearly desperate condition of Hesse's most important works, we can only hope there will be a next go as comprehensive as this one.

"Eva Hesse," on view at SF MOMA through May 19, travels to Museum Wiesbaden, Germany, June 15-Oct. 13; Tate Modern, London, Nov. 2002-Mar. 2003.

Pamela M. Lee is assistant professor of art and art history at Stanford University. (See Contributors.)

PAMELA M. LEE is a Stanford University--based art historian. The author of Object to Be Destroyed Object to Be Destroyed is a work by American artist Man Ray. The work, which also goes by other names, consists of a metronome with a photograph of an eye attached to its swinging arm.

The original Object to Be Destroyed was created in 1923.
: The Work of Gordon Matta-Clark (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  Press, 1999) and coauthor of Drawing Is Another Kind of Language (Harvard University Press The Harvard University Press is a publishing house, a division of Harvard University, that is highly respected in academic publishing. It was established on January 13, 1913. In 2005, it published 220 new titles. , 1997), the catalogue for a traveling show of modern American works on paper, Lee is a contributor to October, Texte zur Kunst, Assemblage, and Word and Image, among other publications. Her research currently focuses on the relation between time and technology in the art of the '60s. For this issue Lee reviews the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's Eva Hesse retrospective, which opens at the Museum Wiesbaden, Germany, June 15.
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Author:Lee, Pamela M.
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:1940
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