Jason Meadows: Marc Foxx.Writing about Jason Meadows's sculpture in 1998, Dennis Cooper concluded that "there's something about Meadows's low-key yet forward-thinking sculptures that toys innocently with your mind while, at the same time, making you think unusually hard and well about the great unknown's possible discrepancies." Meadows achieves this mental mobility by way of a thorough assimilation of the seemingly contradictory syntaxes and grammars of, among others, Anthony Caro and H. C. Westermann H. C. Westermann (Horace Clifford Cliff Westermann) (11 December1922 (Los Angeles, California)-3 November1981 (Danbury, Connecticut)) was an American printmaker and sculptor whose art constituted a scathing commentary on militarism and materialism. . Even more than he's been testing the borderlines between abstraction and figuration fig·u·ra·tion n. 1. The act of forming something into a particular shape. 2. A shape, form, or outline. 3. The act of representing with figures. 4. A figurative representation. 5. , in his last few shows, especially his brilliant "The Thought That Counts" at Sister in Los Angeles in 2004--for which he collaborated with seven sculptors by providing "pedestals" for their work--he's been questioning what supports structure or what structures support in a moment when too much sculpture seems content to be nothing more than a prop. The "prop" problem may explain the appearance of the ne plus ultra of contemporary props, Paris Hilton, in two of the collages and one of the wall works that surrounded the five sculptures in Meadows's recent show at Marc Foxx, "Life on Mars Scientists have long speculated about the possibility of life on Mars owing to the planet's proximity and similarity to Earth. It remains an open question whether life exists on Mars now, or existed there in the past. ." The title might be taken as a cue to begin exploring (sculptural, conceptual) space: How is it territorialized differently now, and how can a sculpture acknowledge the effect of the cybernetic cy·ber·net·ics n. (used with a sing. verb) The theoretical study of communication and control processes in biological, mechanical, and electronic systems, especially the comparison of these processes in biological and artificial systems. without denying its own history? How might sculpture materialize its and our futurity? While the appearance of Paris in any context instant-messages and product-places the idea of celebrity, media event, and alienated superwealth, her utter plasticity makes her a hyperbolic fetish for sculptural possibility. In Paris Scorpion, 2005, a cut-apart picture of the heiress idling atop a grand piano in a silky red dress, vamping a stenciled scorpion tail, in white spray paint, floats on vivid blue paper. Familiar and yet bracingly abstract, Stripped Opportunity, 2006, a Mars Rover-like contraption, is grounded on red Westermannish axles linked by a wooden street marker and propped up on cinder blocks. Tailing off into a blue-broom "tail fin," extending upward into periscopic per·i·scop·ic adj. Of, relating to, or permitting the observation of objects from positions in or out of the direct line of sight. periscopic affording a wide range of vision. tin-can "oculars," and opening out into a wing of honeycombed steel, its metallic chassis seems to be a transformed workbench centered by two disks or "gears," one of blue Plexiglas, another of mosaicked mirror, the whole seeming to refer to the studio in which it was made. Never frustrating the overall coherence of the assembly, the appearance of jerry-rigging--wires attaching metal brackets to wooden dowels; a small vise clamping a bit of plastic to the machine--paradoxically points out how deliberate Meadows has become in his use of the tacky, the DIY DIY abbr. do-it-yourself DIY or d.i.y. Brit, Austral & NZ do-it-yourself DIY abbr DIY do it yourself a DIY shop/job. , and the geometrical for unerring un·err·ing adj. Committing no mistakes; consistently accurate. un·err ing·ly adv. effects
made to look casual. In sync with both Joss Whedon's Serenity
(2005) and HBO's Deadwood Deadwood, city (1990 pop. 1,830), seat of Lawrence co., W S.Dak.; settled 1876 after discovery of gold. A Black Hills tourist center, it is also a trade hub for a lumbering, stock-raising, and mining region. , Meadows images and discombobulates
contemporaneity as a Wild West making do with what's at hand.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In Prospector, 2006, an elongated e·lon·gate tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates To make or grow longer. adj. or elongated 1. Made longer; extended. 2. Having more length than width; slender. steel shovel intersects a Z made of wood and MDF (1) (Main Distribution Frame) A wiring rack that connects outside lines with internal lines. It is used to connect public or private lines coming into the building to internal networks. , the shovel's handle attached to the sides of the Z's upper horizontal. With a nod to Jonathan Borofsky's chattering men, fastened atop the Z are dual silhouettes of a human head, its two parts bolted together at the eye; resting on the Z's shortened base board is a metal basket filled with gravel and marbles. Syncopating, almost musically, the notion of prop and support, two brick-colored cement wedges hold up the entire affair, while, glancing off the floor, the shovel's scoop extends beyond it, a third brick wedge, inverted, just out of reach. To ignore the daring formalization occurring in Meadows's most recent work, which breaks apart--harlequinizes--the layered (temporal, dimensional, personal) planarities of seeing into constitutive and discrepant dis·crep·ant adj. Marked by discrepancy; disagreeing. [Middle English discrepaunt, from Latin discrep material parts, would be to miss how he's constructing meanings; but to see only formal issues would be to fail to ask how, why, and at what cost the West was won. |
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