Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,495,747 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

L.A. Raeven.


I've often been bored looking at art in a gallery, but I don't remember ever before experiencing a work that seemed bored with me. This was the possibly dubious accomplishment of L.A. Raeven, a pair of artists from Amsterdam who seem to have found in their own twinhood the perfect metaphor and mechanism for the modernist ideal of self-referentiality: a closed communicative circuit in which no viewer need be addressed. Their work here consisted of a pair of pairs, or perhaps even a pair of pairs of pairs. The overarching pairing was of two video installations, Wild Zone 1, 2001, and Wild Zone 2, 2002, each a double projection. Both video diptychs were about pairs of twins--in the earlier work two enormously thin young women; in the latter, two merely normally slender young men. But this insistent doubleness always seemed about to collapse into unity or fracture into multiplicity. The works were displayed in two rooms but not one per room; one part of Wild Zone 2 was alone in the first room while the other was projected in the second room along with both parts of Wild Zone 1; as a result, the whole thing seemed to comprise a single work--signed, moreover, with a single name, L.A. Raeven, that stands for two people, Liesbeth and Angelique. And within each work the same figure could appear on more than one screen simultaneously, as though propagating identically through something like cellular division.

The two women do very little over the course of the videos. They sip from wine glasses, they move around a bit, but basically they just hang out, sitting on the floor of a nearly empty room: white wall, concrete floor--your basic white-box gallery space, echoing those in which the piece is likely to be shown. That is, the women--the artists themselves, as it turns out--are shown as art objects, not unlike those "living sculptures," the young Gilbert & George. Gazing out impassively im·pas·sive  
adj.
1. Devoid of or not subject to emotion.

2. Revealing no emotion; expressionless.

3. Archaic Incapable of physical sensation.

4. Motionless; still.
 at the viewer, disaffected and sullen-looking, the artists/subjects seem to share that deep rapport often attributed to twins. Through its very wordlessness, this implicit communication excludes any third party. In a strange way the pair represents the stance of the paradigmatic See paradigm.  works of the modernist avant-gardes-of Duchamp, of course, but also of artists like Barnett Newman Barnett Newman (January 29, 1905 – July 4, 1970) was an American artist. He is seen as one of the major figures in abstract expressionism and one of the foremost of the color field painters.  or 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.
, which the public still tends to find infuriatingly incommunicative; works in which, as Boris Groys once said, "it is not the observer who judg es the artwork" (as Diderot or Kant presumed during the age of Enlightenment The Enlightenment (French: Siècle des Lumières; German: Aufklärung; Italian: Illuminismo; Portuguese: ) but rather "the artwork that judges--and often condemns--its public." Here before these life-size figures in all their indifference to the world, one had the feeling of being excluded from a club one hadn't even aspired to join.

And yet there is a potential role for viewers in L.A. Raeven's work (how else could it be art?), as Wild Zone 2 made clear. The two boys lack the near-complete self-containment exhibited by the artists; they dawdle daw·dle  
v. daw·dled, daw·dling, daw·dles

v.intr.
1. To take more time than necessary: dawdled through breakfast.

2.
 nervously around their space (that of the ICA Ica (ē`kä), city (1993 pop. 108,724), capital of Ica dept., SW Peru, on the Pan-American Highway. It is a commercial center for the cotton, wool, and wine produced in the region. There are several summer resorts nearby.  itself) reading aloud from a series of rules the artists have supplied them so that the boys can become a perfectly matched pair like themselves. These rules primarily govern the intake of nourishment, that is, how the self assimilates what is other: "I WANT to become like HIM. I want and I NEED to eat EXACTLY THE SAME as HIM, both in HOW MUCH and in WHAT I eat....If he tries to cheat I am angry and I have to PUNISH HIM. We CAN NOT and DO NOT WANT TO CHOOSE which portion of food we have, neither one of us can have CONTROL, so we have to flip a coin." And so on. The point is that one begins to accede to accede to
verb 1. agree to, accept, grant, endorse, consent to, give in to, surrender to, yield to, concede to, acquiesce in, assent to, comply with, concur to

2.
 art not by direct imitation (L.A. Raeven's rules make no reference to themselves) but by following the rules that art--that is, L.A. Raeven as its livin g embodiment--follows. The logical fulfillment of their project could only be the impossible instauration of a new academy in which judgment would once again--contra Kant--become subordinate to rules.

At a time when the supposed erasure ERASURE, contracts, evidence. The obliteration of a writing; it will render it void or not under the same circumstances as an interlineation. (q.v.) Vide 5 Pet. S. C. R. 560; 11 Co. 88; 4 Cruise, Dig. 368; 13 Vin. Ab. 41; Fitzg. 207; 5 Bing. R. 183; 3 C. & P. 65; 2 Wend. R. 555; 11 Conn.  of boundaries between art and life has given rise to so many casual and perfunctory efforts simply to reproduce the real, L.A. Raeven go to the opposite extreme, insisting that art's role may be the fundamentally paranoid or at least compulsive one of impressing some order on the real, however arbitrary, by not only insisting on one's difference but positing it as universal. They are not the only ones to do so (Andrea Zittel's mundane and rule-bound utopia comes to mind as a comparable enterprise). But how many others insist so implacably im·plac·a·ble  
adj.
Impossible to placate or appease: implacable foes; implacable suspicion.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin
 on their own idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 absolute? Commentators on L.A. Raeven's work rend rend  
v. rent or rend·ed, rend·ing, rends

v.tr.
1. To tear or split apart or into pieces violently. See Synonyms at tear1.

2.
 to interpret it in terms of a medical condition, anorexia. While this diagnosis-from-a-distance may be accurate, the artists are quite correct in their strict refusal to address what they do in those terms. One's reaction to them as repulsive--or for that matter alluring--is secondary to one's recognition of their proposal to establish their own bodies, of a type normally considered pathological, as a standard in place of any other we might have brought to bear. The viewer is not there to diagnose the artwork but, if capable, to emulate it, to be transformed in its emaciated e·ma·ci·ate  
tr. & intr.v. e·ma·ci·at·ed, e·ma·ci·at·ing, e·ma·ci·ates
To make or become extremely thin, especially as a result of starvation.
 image. One can only feel inadequate in the face of this unpleasant and unlikely demand, but it shows that idiosyncrasy idiosyncrasy /id·io·syn·cra·sy/ (-sing´krah-se)
1. a habit peculiar to an individual.

2. an abnormal susceptibility to an agent (e.g., a drug) peculiar to an individual.
 or inadequacy itself can become exemplary.

Barry Schwabsky is a frequent contributor to Artforum.
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.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Schwabsky, Barry
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2002
Words:928
Previous Article:"Mirroring Evil: Nazi Imagery/Recent Art".(Critical Essay)
Next Article:Gary Simmons.(Critical Essay)
Topics:



Related Articles
A Sceve Celebration: Delie 1544-1994.
Basta callar: Segun el manuscrito Res. 91. Biblioteca Nacional de Madrid.
Critical Essays on Charles W. Chesnutt.(Review)
Detail from La Primavera.(painting by Sandro Botticelli)(Brief Article)(Critical Essay)
The critical response to Ralph Ellison.
Black Catholics 101. (you may be right).
Pilgrim Pathways: Essays in Baptist History in Honour of B.R. White.(Book Review)
Steven L. McKenzie and M. Patrick Graham, editors, The Hebrew Bible Today: an Introduction to Critical Issues.(Book Review)
Vanderbilt Divinity School: Education, Contest, and Change.(Book Review)(Brief Article)
Louisa C. Matthew and Lars R. Jones, eds. Coming About ... a Festschrift for John Shearman.(Book Review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles