Izabella Gustowska: Centre for Contemporary Art at Ujazdowski Castle. (Warsaw).Since the '70s, Izabella Gustowska has played a leading role in the conceptually inclined Polish art concerned with the body and the feminist critique of representation. Comprising eight multimedia installations (she calls them "self-operating audio-visual objects") from 1998-2001, her recent exhibition "Passions and Other Cases" blurred the boundaries between visible and invisible, solid and fragile, opaque and transparent, sensual and sexual. With video projections displayed on specifically fabricated objects, with video monitors incorporated into elaborate constructions, several of them recalled fantastic machines in the perpetuum mobile tradition; others looked like giant semitransparent surveillance structures made of Plexiglas. Placed in darkness and generating cacophonous sounds, Gustowska's dramatically illuminated installations were gathered into a labyrinthine lab·y·rin·thine (l b![]() -r n passage in which they looked like ghostly apparitions. L'Amour AMOUR - A Mutually-Orthogonal Usercode Receiver passion, 2000, consisted of three large oval forms built of thick steel rods, looking like a cross between a sarcophagus sarcophagus (särkŏf`əgəs) [Gr.,=flesh-eater], name given by the Greeks to a special marble found in Asia Minor, near the territory of ancient Troy, and used in caskets. It was believed to have the property of destroying the entire body, except for the teeth, within a few weeks. and a large satellite dish, but one whose slow movements suggested breathing. The videos projected onto the tops of the oval forms presented three embracing couples (heterosexual and homosexual), who throughout most of the projection gently touched each other's faces and hair as if checking to see and feel if their partners really existed. Gustowska tinted 1. TINT - Interpreted version of JOVIAL. [Sammet 1969, p. 528]. 2. tint - hue these projections a moist green hue that enhanced their mesmerizing, visionary qualities. The forms cast shadows that lingered on the walls and ceiling like giant seaweed set in slow motion--somehow both enchanting and menacing. Playing with the various meanings of the word "medium" in Czasu herbaty (Tea time) and W dzien zacmienia (Day of the eclipse), both 2000, Gustowska ventured into the realm of celestial phenomena, ghosts, and spiritualist seances. Tea Time was seemingly created during an eclipse, a phenomenon that, the artist believes, slows down time, enhances melancholy, and makes bizarre things happen. On an oval construction, similar to those in L'Amour passion, Gustowska projected a five-minute video in which a levitating teapot and two cups grew, stretched, and flew toward the viewer--and then turned into abstract shapes. Simultaneously, a red disk suggestive of the eclipse was projected onto the sides of the satellite dish-like structure. A similar red disk reappeared in Day of the Eclipse, this time resembling a levitating plate placed in the center of a "table" (another oval structure) that looked like something that might be used for a seance; this was surrounded by a projection of six sets of women's hands, each pai r manipulating a small white plate. In both works, Gustowska tinted the projections a fiery red-orange hue, reverting to a chromatic symbolism that equates "hot" colors with love, passion, and erotic excess. As shapes in the installations merged with each other and then separated, they seemed to move in a rhythmic dance of objects, like a Rorschach Hermann 1884-1922. Swiss psychiatrist. His inkblot test, introduced in 1921, has become a standard clinical diagnostic tool in psychiatry. |
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