Heidi Bucher: Migros Museum Fur Gegenwartskunst.This retrospective was not only one of the most compelling exhibitions at the Migros under the directorship of Heike Munder but also a welcome surprise among the more predictable names showing at one museum after another. Unlike other episodes in Munder's ongoing reexamination re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines 1. To examine again or anew; review. 2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination. of the art of the '70s, it introduced a body of work that was largely ignored at the time. Although the short period that Bucher lived in California in the early '70s led to exhibitions at, for example, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, also known as LACMA, is the official and world-renowned art museum of the County of Los Angeles, California, located on Wilshire Boulevard along Museum Row in the Miracle Mile vicinity of Los Angeles. , her soft sculptures and process-based practice that recall the work of other pioneering women artists--Eva Hesse, Rebecca Horn Rebecca Horn (24 March, 1944, Michelstadt) is a German installation artist most famous for her body modifications such as Einhorn (Unicorn), a body-suit with a very large horn projecting vertically from the headpiece, and Pencil Mask , and Ana Mendieta--never found the same critical acclaim when Bucher returned to her native Switzerland. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Here, the sensitive and elegant installation underlined Bucher's ability to make poetry from the everyday by conveying the experience of being inside a human body, first through clothing pieces, then through the representation and transformation of architectural space. A film (shown on DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. ) documenting the 1971 performance Bodyshells introduced the playfulness that ran through Bucher's subsequent explorations of the boundaries between the individual body and its surroundings: Large, bell-shaped foam sculptures on Venice Beach forced the performers to hop and circle around each other in slow motion. The enormous Dragonfly dragonfly, any insect of the order Odonata, which also includes the damselfly. Members of this order are generally large predatory insects and characteristically have chewing mouthparts and four membranous, net-veined wings; they undergo complete metamorphosis. Costume, 1976, worn by Bucher in a photograph, was exhibited alongside a series of framed clothes from the mid-'70s. Dipped in milky liquid latex latex, emulsion of a polymer (e.g., rubber) in water (see colloid). Natural latexes are produced by a number of plants, are usually white in color, and often contain, in addition to rubber, various gums, oils, and waxes. , the old underwear, dresses, and aprons were transformed into smooth, flat surfaces, the fixative fixative /fix·a·tive/ (fik´sit-iv) an agent used in preserving a histological or pathological specimen so as to maintain the normal structure of its constituent elements. fix·a·tive adj. coming to resemble a second skin as it aged. Recalling Brazilian artist Lygia Clark's references in the '70s to architectural structures as a body, a kind of sensory shelter, the clothing pieces evolved into a process--which Bucher continued to develop from the late '70s until her death in 1993--of recording interior spaces. Using houses familiar to her, she applied first fabric and then latex to furniture, windows, doors, floors, and finally whole rooms, peeling the casts away as single objects. The door handle, stair rail, and window shown in the exhibition preserved traces of the past, the creased surface of the latex resembling aged, sloughed-off flesh. At the same time the iridescent ir·i·des·cent adj. 1. Producing a display of lustrous, rainbowlike colors: an iridescent oil slick; iridescent plumage. 2. mother-of-pearl pigment that Bucher rubbed into these smaller skinnings gave them a purplish or silvery sil·ver·y adj. 1. Containing or coated with silver. 2. Resembling silver in color or luster: "A fountain threw high its silvery water" Harriet Beecher Stowe. sheen that metamorphosed solid, domestic detail into the forms and tones of the shells and fish scales that inspired the tiny collages she made in the mid-'50s. It was in the casting of entire rooms, shown suspended and free to tremble gently, that Bucher finally achieved an elastic three-dimensionality. Like the skinnings of floors that contained traces of the original wood, plaster, and even newspaper fragments, Flying Skinroom (Ahnenhaus), 1980-82, appropriated the forms of the tiled oven, paneling, and grand windows of the room while materializing the fragility of memory. A crucial element of the exhibition was a series of black-and-white photographs documenting Bucher's extraordinary method, showing the moment when the latex imprints were torn free from the architecture. The tension inherent in the performative per·for·ma·tive adj. Relating to or being an utterance that peforms an act or creates a state of affairs by the fact of its being uttered under appropriate or conventional circumstances, as a justice of the peace uttering process was communicated in the images of the artist winding one skin around her own body until she disappeared into it and in another in which she had arranged for Flying Skinroom to be flown through the air suspended, weightless at last, from a crane. |
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