Guy Richards Smit: Team. (Reviews: New York).Guy Richards Smit's latest exhibition opened with a bash on New Year's Eve, as if to announce that in 2002 art could be funny again. Reveling in self-parody, Smit's videos and related watercolors offered a deft mockery of the excesses, attitudes, and social pretensions of the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of art world. This is familiar ground for Smit: In previous videos, he cast himself as his own artistic alter ego, Jonathan Grossmalerman ("big painter guy" in German), a narcissist with a high substance intake who spends more time in nightclubs than in the studio. Grossmalerman embodies the overindulgence o·ver·in·dulge v. o·ver·in·dulged, o·ver·in·dulg·ing, o·ver·in·dulg·es v.tr. 1. To indulge (a desire, craving, or habit) to excess: overindulging a fondness for chocolate. of '8os-style life in the fast lane. Smit's recent works extend the long-running narrative with the same unrelenting sarcasm but with new characters and an emphasis on multiscreen installations. In one of the videos, Grossmalerman is replaced by another art-world stereotype, the Angry Female Artist (played by Smit's friend Zoe Lister-Jones). The room-filling five-screen installation Zoe Come Home, 2001, plays like a music video on a giant scale, Band members, each on his or her own screen, perform against alternating background colors. The title character, in requisite edgy ensemble of tight shirt and chicly torn denim skirt, tells her story in a confident, haughty tone: "I am unstoppable.... I want to be sexually threatening to everyone.... I will burn every bridge, I will bury you all, and I refuse to be influenced by anyone who came of age in the '60s." Ultimately she concludes, "I work very hard and I have the best ideas. That is why lam a great artist." The satire of careerism ca·reer·ism n. Pursuit of professional advancement as one's chief or sole aim: "Rampant careerism, which makes many a work place a joyless site, was in check" Mary McGrory. and selfimportance continues in Passerby, 2001-2002, three projections in the second gallery that flesh out a bitter tale of art's social and financial undercurrents. One video shows Smit's real-life band, Maxi Geil and Play Colt, performing earnestly in a gallery space hung with a few paintings. The no-frills production values and the band's preppie-punk style evoke early MTV MTV in full Music Television U.S. cable television network, established in 1980 to present videos of musicians and singers performing new rock music. MTV won a wide following among rock-music fans worldwide and greatly affected the popular-music business. . Smit sports a yellow-and-black tie and a rumpled blue oxford shirt; the female backup singer wears a miniskirt miniskirt skirts hemmed at mid-thigh or higher; heyday of the leg in fashion world (1960s). [Am. Hist.: Sann, 255–263] See : Fads and RayBans. On the opposite wall, a perspiring artist (Smit himselfl is seen greeting guests at an opening, nervously playing the endless handshake and air-kiss game. The adjacent projection shows an art dealer (played by galerist John Post Lee, who has appeared in Smit's earlier videos) anxiously reading the Financial Times: The days of young buyers flush with dot-com cash are over. From this the footage cuts to a group of would-be gallerygoers roaming the streets of Chelsea, approaching sets of tall glass doors only to find them locked. It's an amusing if obvious simile simile (sĭm`əlē) [Lat.,=likeness], in rhetoric, a figure of speech in which an object is explicitly compared to another object. Robert Burns's poem "A Red Red Rose" contains two straightforward similes: for the "exclusivity" of galleries and that shut-out feeling experienced by many artists trying to get a foothold: Those doors may be just glass, but sometimes it feels as if there might as well be a moat and drawbridge drawbridge: see bridge. before them. The theme of exclusivity comes full circle in the song Smit and his band perform in the video; "Passerby" refers to the eponymous bar at Gavin Brown's Enterprise, a generally overcrowded o·ver·crowd v. o·ver·crowd·ed, o·ver·crowd·ing, o·ver·crowds v.tr. To cause to be excessively crowded: a system of consolidation that only overcrowded the classrooms. , very loud, smoke-filled watering hole immortalized in Smit's lyric description, "where the art world comes together in a hideous crush, where they degrade themselves and whomever whom·ev·er pron. The objective case of whoever. See Usage Note at who. whomever pron the objective form of whoever: they touch." Smit implicates himself in the game too, and the work manages to walk the line between one-note sarcasm and a genuine longing for a real sense of community. |
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