Hanne Darboven: Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert, Inc.If you've seen an installation by German artist Hanne Darboven, her signature style will likely have stayed with you: wall-to-wall grids of page-size panels, marked by wavelike rows of what appears to be crossed-out cursive script. This gnomic gno·mic adj. Marked by aphorisms; aphoristic: gnomic verse; a gnomic style. gnomic Adjective Literary stand-in for legible text is punctuated by series of numbers or passages of German prose, black-and-white photographs, or stamped labels reminiscent of the return address and postmark on envelopes. The panels are often framed identically, and a bureaucratic palette of black and red ink red ink Health administration A popular term for financial losses. Cf in the Black. on white, buff, or green paper maintains throughout. The result is information overload A symptom of the high-tech age, which is too much information for one human being to absorb in an expanding world of people and technology. It comes from all sources including TV, newspapers, magazines as well as wanted and unwanted regular mail, e-mail and faxes. expressed as precisely edited monotone mon·o·tone n. 1. A succession of sounds or words uttered in a single tone of voice. 2. Music a. A single tone repeated with different words or time values, especially in a rendering of a liturgical text. . [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Darboven is, in her cryptic way, a gameplayer, and her embedded mathematical, historical, and pop-cultural details challenge the determined sleuth with polyvalent polyvalent /poly·va·lent/ (-va´lent) multivalent. pol·y·va·lent adj. 1. Acting against or interacting with more than one kind of antigen, antibody, toxin, or microorganism. 2. epistemological and chronological puzzles. The Dia Foundation's website even includes a tutorial about the monumental Kulturgeschichte 1880-1983 (Cultural History 1880-1983), 1980-83, that was published when the work was shown in Darboven's last 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 exhibition in 1996-97. In her recent show at Gasser Gas·ser , Herbert Spencer 1888-1963. American physiologist. He shared a 1944 Nobel Prize for research on the functions of nerve fibers. & Grunert--which included two pieces, one small, one large, both more than a decade old--four pages of an essay by Dietmar Elger were made available to provide interpretive assistance. It is perhaps perverse to refuse such helpful glosses, but Darboven is not unperverse herself. "I don't describe," she has said. "I write." Well, yes and no. For Darboven, "writing" and "drawing" function as "thinking" and "counting," and this can be seen without exegesis exegesis Scholarly interpretation of religious texts, using linguistic, historical, and other methods. In Judaism and Christianity, it has been used extensively in the study of the Bible. Textual criticism tries to establish the accuracy of biblical texts. . A complete understanding, though, is intentionally obstructed and would in any case run counter to the meditation on structures of knowledge that the work provokes. In Evolution Leibniz, 1986, the more complex piece presented here, an evacuated approximation of handwriting is overwritten in a kind of double negative that questions the power of record keeping and the personal, physical gesture. The librarian's palette and exploded-book format splay the private space of reading across a public installation, introducing problems of scale and focus the solutions to which elude even the informed viewer/reader. Similarly, the smaller piece, Dostojewski, 1990, is hardly as modest as it may at first appear; it represents the "December" of a twelve-part arithmetical riff on the dates of 1990, which also concerns, eponymously but tangentially, the works of Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky. The mathematical progression can be unpacked with an external key, but the way in which the sixteen notebook-size graph-paper sheets marked with black-inked numbers are grouped is not thereby described. The numbers' relationship to a collaged postcard depicting a colonnaded col·on·nade n. Architecture 1. A series of columns placed at regular intervals. 2. A structure composed of columns placed at regular intervals. building and several Russian editions of Dostoevsky's books simply cannot be made transparent or direct. The room-size Evolution Leibniz comprises a grid of 222 framed pages of anti-cursive mixed with texts copied from entries in the Brockhaus encyclopedia on the seventeenth-century German philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. These are interspersed with photographs of objects from Darboven's collection of nineteenth- and twentieth-century kitsch. A toy toilet figures prominently, as do a toy blacksmith at his anvil anvil Iron block on which metal is placed for shaping, originally by hand with a hammer. The blacksmith's anvil is usually of wrought iron (sometimes of cast iron), with a smooth working surface of hardened steel. and a wooden leg in a vitrine. High up in the top left-hand corner, the first panel gives away the game of linguistic fragmentation--NO COMMENT, it reads. But this is neither description nor proscription. The gallery is filled with commentary on life, death, work, fear, memory, and longing; the installation is a picture of such commentary. What it might mean is another story. Like Gertrude Stein, to whom she has been compared, Darboven records not narrative or data but the process of perception and the passage of time. Walking around in her daunting daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin archive of composition-as-explanation, the visitor is left alone to sift through scattered words and pictures, to take an active role in assembling a unified impression of the whole. |
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