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Jennifer Dalton: Plus Ultra. (New York).


In her latest exhibition, "A Task No One Assigned," Jennifer Dalton responded to a comment by New Yorker critic Peter Schjeldahl characterizing art production as unmandated or self-commissioned effort. "What makes these exercises art?" Schjeldahl wrote of "Paradise Now," a group show at Exit Art in New York in 2000. "Well, what else might they reasonably be? They involve real work that is really gratuitous ... [and] that's distinction enough." Dalton, quoting him in the press release, has accepted his dictates as both permission granted and gauntlet thrown down. The three interlinked works here manifest the documentary obsession of both insider (elated fan) and outsider (citizen watchdog) in a spiffed-up conceptual practice based on listing and archiving.

For What Does an Artist Look Like? (Every photograph of an artist appearing in the New Yorker 1999-2001) (all works 2002), Dalton has assembled, as advertised, every portrait of a writer, musician, dancer, filmmaker, designer, visual artist, and architect printed by Schjeldahl's employer in the designated years. The mounts for her rephotographs are color-coded for gender (white for women, black for men, gray for mixed groups) and include handwritten hand·write  
tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes
To write by hand.



[Back-formation from handwritten.]

Adj. 1.
 captions rating the subjects on a sliding scale from "genius" to "pinup pin·up  
n.
1.
a. A picture, especially of a sexually attractive person, that is displayed on a wall.

b. A person considered a suitable model for such a picture.

2.
." Wall-mounted in tight horizontal rows, the 436 postcard-size mug shots quote the format of corporate personnel displays and missing-person picture galleries while evoking the ad hoc arrangements of touchstone images in artists' studios. The piece yields some surprises (musicians predominate) and some tediously persistent foregone conclusions (men predominate, too). What a strange celebrity culture is generated by fetishizing "creative talent," a je ne sais quoi je ne sais quoi  
n.
A quality or attribute that is difficult to describe or express: "Fishing has lacked a certain je ne sais quoi in terms of its public image, as all activities must that involve beer, worms and
 quality Dalton rightly diagnos es as equal parts brilliant spirit and sexy vibe. Thus Lil' Kim, contriving to look forbidding in a platinum wig and ruffled ruf·fle 1  
n.
1. A strip of frilled or closely pleated fabric used for trimming or decoration.

2. A ruff on a bird.

3.
a. A ruckus or fray.

b. Annoyance; vexation.

4.
 pink bikini top, is clearly a "pinup"; Iris Murdoch, hunched at her desk in a Hemingway-esque cloud of cigarette smoke, is just as obviously a "genius." Young John and Paul John and Paul ((Italian) Giovanni e Paolo) are saints in the Roman Catholic Church. They were martyred at Rome on 26 June. , baby-faced and eager in a Frankfurter or Liverpudlian pub, occupy the exact middle of the scale.

While Dalton's New Yorker piece parses the "highbrow high·brow  
adj. also high·browed
Of, relating to, or being highly cultured or intellectual: They only attend highbrow events such as the ballet or the opera.

n.
 general interest" category of art appreciation, the "trade publication" and "private opinion" registers are represented by Artforum and the artist herself, respectively. In Every Adjective Used to Describe Artists and Their Work in Artforum's "Best of 2000" Dalton carefully records said modifiers in pencil on a long paper scroll. The terms are classed by the gender of the artist, and parity is achieved in praise. But the men's list is nearly three times as long as the women's, a devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 imbrication imbrication

surgical pleating and folding of tissue to realign organs and provide extra support, e.g. chronically stretched joint capsule.


Flo imbrication
 of qualitative and quantitative analysis: The long blank space filling out the women's column speaks volumes. The New Yorker and Artforum works are an implicit call to arms, which Dalton answers in a sharp but goofy computer presentation called Contemporary Art According to Jen. Decorated with painfully cheesy cheesy (che´ze) caseous.  clip art, the PowerPoint windows cycle through a version of art-world categorization, with headings like THE ARTIST AS LOSER or THE ARTIST AS DOCUMENTA RIAN. A notebook invites viewers to add names to Dalton's index or to invent additional categories.

"The Artist as Documentarian doc·u·men·tar·i·an   also doc·u·men·ta·rist
n.
One that makes documentaries or a documentary.
" includes the name Jen Dalton, alongside Danica Phelps, Elizabeth Campbell, Joseph Grigely, Mary Kelly, and others; we might also think of "chart artist" Mark Lombardi, who uses a conceptualist con·cep·tu·al·ism  
n.
1. Philosophy The doctrine, intermediate between nominalism and realism, that universals exist only within the mind and have no external or substantial reality.

2.
 idiom to discuss relationships of money, influence, and visibility in the larger corporate landscape. And, of course, in taking up the task that Schjeldahl and the rest of us have tacitly assigned her, Dalton pays homage to a previous generation of art-media whistle-blowers. If the Guerrilla Girls styled themselves "the conscience of the art world," Dalton might be our superego--compelled by order and hierarchy, intrigued by power, locked in language yet unable to completely repress the desiring, self-referential, and expansive force from which art making springs.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Richard, Frances
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:630
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