Jon Kessler: P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center.In the twilight of empire, in the spider hole where the masters of the universe have gone to ground with their simulacral weapons, reality gives way to violent phantasmagoria phan·tas·ma·go·ri·a or phan·tas·ma·go·ry n. pl. phan·tas·ma·go·ri·as or phan·tas·ma·go·ries A fantastic sequence of haphazardly associative imagery, as seen in dreams or fever. . This is not news. But it was the scenario described by Jon Kessler's multiroom installation at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center The P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center is one of the largest and oldest institutions in the United States dedicated solely to contemporary art. It is located in the neighborhood of Long Island City, Queens in New York City. , The Palace at 4 A.M., 2005, and it packed a wallop, its physically overwhelming formal properties synced tightly with the simple, lonely rage that was its subject. Kessler's first solo museum show in New York was also his largest show to date, filling a high-ceilinged hall and its side galleries. The title comes from Alberto Giacometti's 1932 sculpture, which looks like an abstracted desk toy. Kessler retained its atmosphere of idle amusement in the king's dreamtime dream·time also Dream·time n. The time of the creation of the world in Australian Aboriginal mythology: "Aboriginal myths tell of the legendary totemic beings who wandered across the country in the Dreamtime . . . . But his expanded scale turned playfulness to nightmare. Billboards obstructed the main gallery's entrances, and the space was hot and noisy with the energy of televisions, cameras, clip-lights, and homemade zoetropes spinning, humming, flickering, and clacking. Fragmented images in bad-TV color spewed from every technological orifice orifice /or·i·fice/ (or´i-fis) 1. the entrance or outlet of any body cavity. 2. any opening or meatus.orific´ial aortic orifice , and stacks of monitors loomed above head height, while cables festooned the ceiling and snaked underfoot. Visitors picked their way through a jury-rigged, digital-dada sprawl of ads, fashion- and porn-magazine clips, and mad-inventor contraptions in which hybridized GI Joes in new clothing were made to act for live-feed cameras that sent their aggressively fake footage across the room, where it was instantly relayed onscreen. Other cameras captured audience members, adding their bemused faces to the toxic wash of stimuli. Commodity-overload installation, in which a dense array of mass-produced objects is made to stand for a collective desire to be ecstatically engulfed, is almost a genre in itself. But while some artists work to redeem materialist 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. by the equipoise equipoise Medical ethics A state of uncertainty regarding the pros or cons of either therapeutic arm in a clinical trial of their sculptural choices, and others celebrate violent or scatological sca·tol·o·gy n. pl. sca·tol·o·gies 1. The study of fecal excrement, as in medicine, paleontology, or biology. 2. a. An obsession with excrement or excretory functions. b. mess for its own psychodynamic Psychodynamic A therapy technique that assumes improper or unwanted behavior is caused by unconscious, internal conflicts and focuses on gaining insight into these motivations. Mentioned in: Group Therapy, Suicide sake, the pleasure that Kessler evinces in his accumulations touches a deeper--or more exposed--nerve. He has said that the P.S. 1 installation "turn[s] the world into another prop." But in so doing, it argues by negative example that the world is not a prop, that distant people and places are not screens for group fantasy, and that the will to flatten experience into brutal pictures recoils upon such icons' consumer-creators. A giant billboard showing George W. Bush's face scrawled with a bloodred WAR and an enormous blowup of Saddam Hussein's wrecked palace are overdetermined Overdetermined can refer to
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] This assertion of independent agency was far from redemptive, however. If anything, the sense of private implicatedness made the ugliness worse, as in a moment where Kessler trained a live-feed camera on the skyline out the window, framing it in a cardboard cutout cut·out n. 1. Something cut out or intended to be cut out from something else. 2. Electricity A device that interrupts, bypasses, or disconnects a circuit or circuit element. 3. of flames so that the city seemed to burn under our gaze. The main doorway into the show framed a similar moment: One entered through an archway cut into a blank billboard, and only on looking back at the opposite side of the panel did one discover that the passage led through a monumental beaver-shot. "I do want viewers to be reborn when they enter my show," Kessler remarked, "but not into a clean state." |
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