Kate Bush on Damian Ortega. (First Take).ONE OF A COTERIE COTERIE - Columbia Object-oriented Testbed for Exploratory Research in Interactive Environments GROUPED AROUND MEXICO CITY'S Galeria Kurimanzutto, Damian Ortega conceives his artworks not as discrete, rarefied objects but rather as forms of action combining material with thought. The young Mexican artist leaped onto the international stage this fall with "Cosmic Thing," a solo exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, which followed contributions in 2001 to a number of notable group shows, like "Squatters #1" at Witte de With, Rotterdam, and the Museu de Arte Contemporanea de Serralves, Porto, and "Animations" at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center in New York. If you're traveling south this winter, check him out (through March 1) at "The Air Is Blue," Hans-Ulrich Obrist's curatorial intervention in the Casa Barragan, Mexico City. Ortega's works touch on questions of social space and environmentalism, on postindustrialization and urban modernity. The formal register is one of understated, poetic constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended) constructions. Their sculptural works derived from cubism and futurism, but had a more architectonic and machinelike emphasis related to the technology of the society in which they were created. and as such can be related to a long Latin American sculptural tradition, as exemplified by the Neo-concretists. Ortega, though, invests the mode with his own deft humor: A proposition for a new kind of building technique, for example, which utilizes the ubiquitous tortilla as a cheap, practical material, conjures an object of delicate, delicious beauty (Tortilla Construction Modules, 1998). Now thirty-five years old, Ortega left school at sixteen to pursue a career as a political cartoonist in the left-wing press but in the last few years has concentrated his observations on the contemporary world into sculptural form. Comparisons with friend and compatriot Gabriel Orozco have been made, and it's hard to avoid viewing Cosmic Thing, 2002, Ortega's most ambitious sculpture to date, in part as a witty riposte to Orozco's famous La DS, 1993. Where Orozco chose the gleaming allure of the eternally desirable Citroen, Ortega opts for the humble (classic) VW Beetle, a car appreciated more for its endurance than for its style. Driven by millions of Mexicans and now manufactured solely on the edges of Mexico City (the US halted imports in 1977), it's a car laden with a sense of national identity. Originally a product of Nazi engineering, the "people's car" has fulfilled its democratic promise on Mexican soil. It may be technologically outmoded, but it still stands for the triumph of pragmatic New World ec onomics over profligate consumer culture, with its endless cycles of novelty and obsolescence. Ortega takes the Beetle, disassembles it part by part, component by component, and recomposes it in space, so that it hangs in the air, a cross between a three-dimensional rendition of a mechanic's instruction manual and an entomologist's anatomy exercise. Where Orozco operated surgically, slicing and suturing the "goddess's" chassis, Ortega is the pathologist, dissecting and analyzing the body of the Bug in space. Where Orozco's DS is all sleek reduction and potential motion, Ortega's Beetle is as static as a pre-Columbian sculpture and--at least viewed frontally, with its beaked bonnet and popping, vacant eyes--slightly reminiscent of those mythical hybrid creatures sculpted on Mayan temples in Teotihuacan or Yucatan. Mexican culture's dexterity in adapting certain of international modernism's design ideals to local and practical needs--as symbolized by the success of the VW--also finds expression in Ortega's continuing series of sculptures composed of toy-scaled architectures. In Accion (Action), 2002, he constructed--from the same plastic used in Latin America's first social housing--a mini--modernist housing project and landscaped it with typical Mexican houseplants, cacti and aloe. The modular buildings spell out the word accion, while the complex's surrounding basketball courts and swimming pools form the word hacer (to do): This conflation (database) conflation - Combining or blending of two or more versions of a text; confusion or mixing up. Conflation algorithms are used in databases. of static architecture and active verb points to a dynamism inherent in tropical modernity's domestication of modernism's utopian plan. Kate Bush is senior programmer at the Photographer's Gallery, London, where she most recently co-organized an exhihition of the photographs of Swiss artist Karlheinz Weinberger. At London's 14 Wharf Road gallery last winter she curated, with Brett Rogers, "Reality Check: Recent Developments in British Photography and Video." |
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