Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,504,020 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Jack Pierson: Cheim & Read.


Jack Pierson's latest exhibition comprised three installation spaces, each captioned with a new signage work. Mismatched gold letters (with a white neon T to start) spell out TO YOUTH (all works 2003), both homage and indicator of loss. This hung adjacent to A Vignette Contrived of Various Objects Depicting the Artist in His Fortieth Year, a tableau of an artful life that announces its affinity with window display. Within a sleek, freestanding metal frame, a selection of furnishings and curios--a David Hockney etching of young male lovers, a bust of Apollo (the original "Greek god") garlanded with roped cowry beads, a headless body of a once fabulous wooden carousel horse cradled on a tattered loveseat--outline the dimensions of a virtual interior. At play in the vicissitudes vicissitudes
Noun, pl

changes in circumstance or fortune [Latin vicis change]

vicissitudes nplvicisitudes fpl; peripecias fpl 
 of youth and decrepitude de·crep·i·tude  
n.
The quality or condition of being weakened, worn out, impaired, or broken down by old age, illness, or hard use.

Noun 1.
 is the perpetual subject of Pierson's work: belligerent or beleaguered be·lea·guer  
tr.v. be·lea·guered, be·lea·guer·ing, be·lea·guers
1. To harass; beset: We are beleaguered by problems.

2. To surround with troops; besiege.
, the glam queen, lover boy, outcast, or clown. Informed as much by doubt as by rapture, these persona fields employ self-portraiture as a means of departure toward worlds of social relations, homoerotic ho·mo·e·rot·ic  
adj.
1. Of or concerning homosexual love and desire.

2. Tending to arouse such desire.

Adj. 1.
 love among them ... a theme that ripples here from the bejeweled be·jew·eled or be·jew·elled  
adj.
Decorated with or as if with jewels.
 Apollo to the Hockney to the L'Heure Bleu perfume box to the big Holy Bible to a copy of W. Somerset Maugham's The Razor's Edge, a novel about an idealistic youth whose search for meaning in life takes him ultimately to India and into the fold of an Indian mystic.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In the installations that shared the large main room of the gallery, Pierson revealed his personal avatar to be less enlightened guru than melancholy clown. In How It Feels, a scratchy-sounding "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" began to play as the visitor stepped onto a large, black-painted stage, putting us in touch with pleasures long past. By proxy, the music served as accompaniment to two other installations. In Ode to Limelight, a solitary dressing table stands with its mirror aglow, personal items strewn strew  
tr.v. strewed, strewn or strewed, strew·ing, strews
1. To spread here and there; scatter: strewing flowers down the aisle.

2.
 across its surface: a pack of Winstons, some theatrical face powder, a grease stick labeled "Clown White," and a penny (for good luck?). As described on the opposite wall in A Rose, the performance must have been a huge success: A cascade of ten-foot-high long-stemmed thorny roses--two drawn in charcoal, three cut from gessoed wood--is caught in a state of suspended animation and delirium delirium

Condition of disorientation, confused thinking, and rapid alternation between mental states. The patient is restless, cannot concentrate, and undergoes emotional changes (e.g., anxiety, apathy, euphoria), sometimes with hallucinations.
.

In the innermost space, Apollo returns in Fragment of a Faun faun: see Faunus.  on White and Fragment of a Faun on Black, two of a series of six small black-and-white paintings. These also include an untitled image of what could be Christ on the cross (this possibility is amplified by a large-lettered Christ hanging high nearby) as well as a portrait of a beautiful young man identified as "Justinstein"--who might be either deity's profane counterpart. The theme of salvation versus no life at all echoes in a wall-size charcoal drawing that matches a modular wooden artist's model with a few crudely scrawled words: DOWN? TIRED? DEPRESSED? YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE.

It's just like Pierson to overdramatize v. t. 1. to present in an overly dramatic manner.

Verb 1. overdramatize - present in an overly dramatic manner; "She is overdramatizing her child's failure in the physics class"
overdramatise
 turning forty. All the gods you've known have vanished and left you an old bag of bones. Life's over; there are still lyric moments, but you've already begun to eroticize e·rot·i·cize  
tr.v. e·rot·i·cized, e·rot·i·ciz·ing, e·rot·i·ciz·es
To make erotic.



e·rot
 the end. Pierson's bipolar Pierrot materializes at the margins as both deity and demon, with lovers fashioned from mythic beings, messiahs, and monsters alike, his melancholia MELANCHOLIA, med. jur. A name given by the ancients to a species of partial intellectual mania, now more generally known by the name of monomania. (q.v.) It bore this name because it was supposed to be always attended by dejection of mind and gloomy ideas. Vide Mania.,  studded with moments of reverie, his dirty mind intact. This Pierrot has invisibly inhabited Pierson's art since the early '90s and by now keeps company with lots of other clowns--Ugo Rondinone's tired clown, Roni Horn's hysterical clown, Bruce Nauman's mean clown, Maurizio Cattelan's prankster clown. Yet none are as tender as Pierson's, who clings to ideals of beauty and love. We might think of him in relation to the beautiful dancer in a late performance work by Felix Gonzalez-Torres, in which an elusive young man appeared infrequently, unpredictably, in the gallery and danced himself to a disco sweat on an empty stage, whether anyone was watching or not.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:New York
Author:Avgikos, Jan
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:660
Previous Article:Ingrid Calame: James Cohan Gallery.(New York)
Next Article:Anne Chu: 303 Gallery.(New York)



Related Articles
Jack Pierson. (Luhring Augustine and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York)
The Kingdom of Matthias: A Story of Sex and Salvation in 19th-Century America.
The Lonely Life.
Jack Pierson: Museum of Contemporary Art. (Miami).(Brief Article)
INDIE MOVIE GURU TELLS HOW IT'S DONE.(L.A. LIFE)
"Jack Pierson, Regrets". (Reviews).
BRIEFLY.(General News)(REGION)
Lizzi Bougatsos.(TOP TEN)(Critical Essay)
Bringing to light.(art & activism)(exhibitions of Jenny Holzer)
U.S. Trust.(Banking and Finance)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles