Karen Finley.FOTOUHI CRAMER GALLERY, P.S. 122 Karen Finley Karen Finley (b. 1956, Evanston, Illinois) is a controversial American performance artist, whose theatrical pieces and recordings have often been labelled "obscene" due to their graphic depictions of sexuality, abuse, and disenfranchisement. , force of nature. If you saw her in an '80s performance club you might have called her that, so powerful was she - but then you'd quickly have felt ridiculous, because it was her particular brilliance to see through any behavioral straitjacket straitjacket /strait·jack·et/ (strat´jak?et) informal name for camisole. strait·jack·et or straight·jack·et n. imagined for her, or for women generally, and to dynamite it on the spot. Whether scripted or ad-libbed, spoken in English or in tongues, her monologues were blistering, and because they were part rant (anger is often a motor for Finley, although another is compassion), part nudity, and part sticky mess, her enemies could tar her crazy. They missed, or refused, her ideas, as if thought were incompatible with such deeply felt expulsions - yet those performances had the quality of bringing what might have seemed sociological or theoretical (the way objectification ob·jec·ti·fy tr.v. ob·jec·ti·fied, ob·jec·ti·fy·ing, ob·jec·ti·fies 1. To present or regard as an object: "Because we have objectified animals, we are able to treat them impersonally" and consumption work on women's bodies, say) into fraught but clear vision. Finley also creates gallery exhibitions and installations, but for this viewer they only occasionally show her at her best. Even so, her show this summer had a certain fierce restlessness that got under your skin, and it gained power retrospectively, when Finley performed The American Chestnut in the-fall. Like a string of twentieth-century artists before her, Finley apparently distrusts the power of illusion: the mechanics of her visual effects are always self-evident. This strategy could be confining, but The American Chestnut, a series of loosely linked monologues, was staged with a steady ingenuity that put the lie to those who deny her work's artfulness. None of its segments was handled the same way; each had its own visual or spatial invention, and these inventions had a purposeful simplicity - a change of clothes, perhaps (completed onstage rather than off), or a particular rhythm of walking while speaking. This practice of making do with little may touch audiences who think that Finley deserves better than the indifferent-to-brutal treatment she has sometimes gotten in the US, but it is certainly a thought-through aesthetic. When Finley trained a video camera on an arrangement of crude doll-scale interiors and props, then projected the enlarged image on the back wall as a fake stage set (the illusion of an illusion), the artifice - so transparent, so homemade - said smart and funny things about how art gets done. I also find a feminist impulse here - an avoidance of the mystification mys·ti·fi·ca·tion n. 1. The act or an instance of mystifying. 2. The fact or condition of being mystified. 3. Something intended to mystify. Noun 1. of mastery. And much of both the gallery show and The American Chestnut addressed the lives of women, from Hillary Clinton (a hilarious bit) to the working mother that Finley herself is. Resenting getting ogled on the street, she imagines a "Victor's Secret" for clothes that spotlight men's scrotums - "little caps knitted in Belgium by nuns!" Reading aloud to her daughter, she finds dysfunctional sexuality in Winnie the Pooh and crew, and both writes and draws on the topic. The monologue is witty, but the drawings, shown in the gallery, are static and have a disproportionate undercurrent of indignation, as if Finley felt she had uncovered some deep ugliness in the family romance. In Nursing, 1995, a video shown at both venues, Finley brusquely brusque also brusk adj. Abrupt and curt in manner or speech; discourteously blunt. See Synonyms at gruff. [French, lively, fierce, from Italian brusco, coarse, rough kneads her breasts to squirt milk onto a black-velvet rectangle, producing a "painting" - a woman's remaking, with her body as medium, of the AbEx drip technique. The velvet hung in the gallery, a compact interrogation interrogation In criminal law, process of formally and systematically questioning a suspect in order to elicit incriminating responses. The process is largely outside the governance of law, though in the U.S. of creativity and male-centered art history. The video itself, however, worked best as an interlude in The American Chestnut, where it was informed by Finley's writing and voice. Actually Finley has a number of voices, ranging from coy playfulness to preacherly power, from a grieving tremble to a rage so over the top as to be both frightening and, once again, funny. The American Chestnut happily draws on a full variety of these possibilities. Clearly, Finley's strengths as a performer and writer are integral to her success as a artist, but some of the pieces in the gallery show pack their own punch. In Moral History, 1994-97, a small library of art books and journals lies open on a table; Finley's comments about them are written in grease pencil grease pencil n. A pencil of hard grease mixed with colorings, used especially for marking on glossy or glazed surfaces. on a sheet of glass damped over these artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. . On Carl Andre Carl Andre (born September 16, 1935) is an American minimalist artist. Andre was born in Quincy, Massachusetts and educated in Quincy public schools and at Philips Academy, Andover, where he became friends with Hollis Frampton and Michael Chapman. Andre served in the U.S. she writes: "The O. J. of the art world." On an old copy of Art forum discussing Yves Klein Yves Klein (28 April 1928 - 6 June 1962) was a French artist and is considered an important figure in post-war European art. New York critics of Klein's time classify him as neo-Dada, but other critics, such as Thomas McEvilley in an essay submitted to Artforum in 1982, have since and the women who rolled in blue paint at his request: "Yves Klein got away with it. I didn't." On one of Willem de Kooning's "Women" paintings: "I'm sick of being interpreted." Irritable, gossipy, accusatory, acute, the piece takes on art history and scores solidly. David Frankel David Frankel (born April 2, 1959, New York City, New York) is an American director, screenwriter, executive producer. He is the son of Max Frankel, former executive editor and later columnist for the New York Times. is a contributing editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw. of Artforum. |
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