LIVERPOOL BIENNIAL OF CONTEMPORARY ART.VARIOUS VENUES Currently undergoing a notable cultural revitalization, the port of Liverpool The Port of Liverpool is the name for the enclosed dock system that runs from Herculaneum Dock to Seaforth Dock, on the east side of the River Mersey, combined with the facilities built around the Great Float on the west side of the river. was the hitherto unlikely venue for the latest addition to an increasingly--and, many would argue, unnecessarily--long list of biennial exhibitions of contemporary art around the world. The Liverpool Biennial comprised four separate shows: "TRACE," an international exhibition curated by Australian Anthony Bond; a lively and extensive response to this show initiated by local artists and irreverently titled "Tracey"; the twenty-first John Moores painting prize, awarded biennially; and the similarly well-established annual "New Contemporaries" show of student work. The catchall catch·all n. 1. A receptacle or storage area for odds and ends. 2. Something that encompasses a wide variety of items or situations: thematic of the "trace" was, according to the catalogue introduction, intended to suggest "materials or objects that allow us to reconstruct histories through our personal memories and associations." This formulation was sufficiently vague to allow Bond to enlist fifty-six artists from around the world for his show, including both lesser-knowns and a lineup of usual suspects (Miroslaw Balka, Stan Douglas, Juan Munoz, Roman Signer, et al.) to engage with locations around the city. Bond's selection favored work with a strong visual and frequently visceral impact. His taste for Grand Guignol was especially evident in the queasy QUEASY - An early system on the IBM 701. [Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959)]. anatomical approximations fashioned from stockings, condoms, thread, and assorted medical instruments by gynecological-nurse-turned-artist Liu Shih-Fen and in Alastair MacLennan's ghoulish ghoul n. 1. One who delights in the revolting, morbid, or loathsome. 2. A grave robber. 3. An evil spirit or demon in Muslim folklore believed to plunder graves and feed on corpses. abandoned feast of pigs' heads, part of the artist's ongoing series of performances and installations commemorating the victims of Northern Ireland's "Troubles." Both of these works were e xhibited in the rough-and-ready, warehouselike environment of the Exchange Flags building, one of the two principal "TRACE" venues. At the opposite end of the spectrum from such histrionics, in the more refined environs of the Tate Gallery Liverpool, were works like Igor and Svetlana Kopystiansky's fifteen-minute video of everyday objects tossing in the wind on a New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of street and Ceal Floyer's low-key projection of a ball that appears to bounce repeatedly against a wall and the floor. Humor of varying sorts was provided elsewhere by Erwin Wurm's dumbly charming One-Minute Sculptures, in which ordinary objects are used to perform an action for which they were not designed, and Pierrick Sorin's rather more disconcerting dis·con·cert tr.v. dis·con·cert·ed, dis·con·cert·ing, dis·con·certs 1. To upset the self-possession of; ruffle. See Synonyms at embarrass. 2. video installations. These ranged from Pierrick et Jean Loup loup a bounding gait. , 1994, featuring the artist and his invented alter ego, to It's Very Nice, 1998, thirty-one monitors displaying varying composite faces with recurring features, which voice a stream of preview-night platitudes. The boldest curatorial gamble was the decision to amass an impressive array of Doris Salcedo's gravely melancholic mel·an·chol·ic adj. 1. Affected with or being subject to melancholy. 2. Of or relating to melancholia. sculptural combinations of old wardrobes, dressers, chairs, and bedsteads filled with cement. Fourteen of these undeniably poignant works were placed in Liverpool's massive Anglican Cathedral. But the gamble didn't quite pay off. The works' inherently powerful presence generally draws added resonance from the implied associations with the ongoing social strife in Salcedo's native Colombia. Here, however, the sculptures' emotional charge was diminished rather than amplified by the grandiosity of the surroundings. Over at the Walker Art Gallery, Michael Raedecker was a worthy if predictably fashionable winner of the John Moores painting prize. The Dutch-born, London-based painter showed a larger-than-usual version of one of his distinctive landscapes executed in acrylic, thread, and sequins on linen (Mirage, 1999). With fifty painters represented, the hang was perhaps unnecessarily overcrowded o·ver·crowd v. o·ver·crowd·ed, o·ver·crowd·ing, o·ver·crowds v.tr. To cause to be excessively crowded: a system of consolidation that only overcrowded the classrooms. and, unfortunately, unimaginative, with paintings insensitively grouped according to superficial formal similarities. Some works were cruelly compromised as a result, in particular Jonathan Hatt's trompe-l'oeil take on classic Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts , Empty Louvre Louvre (l `vrə), foremost French museum of art, located in Paris. The building was a royal fortress and palace built by Philip II in the late 12th cent. , 1999, whose rudimentary illusion was shattered by two all-too-visible wallpaper seams on the wall behind it. Highlights of the final segment, "New Contemporaries 99," also on view in the Exchange Flags building, included Kenny Macleod's deadpan pseudo-confessional video Robbie Fraser, Ian Kiaer's enigmatic sculptural tableau of an Old Testament landscape, and Andrew Currie's high-jinks footage of a menagerie of endearing kinetic biomorphs created from tiny motorized mo·tor·ize tr.v. mo·tor·ized, mo·tor·iz·ing, mo·tor·iz·es 1. To equip with a motor. 2. To supply with motor-driven vehicles. 3. To provide with automobiles. fans, plastic trash bags, cotton thread, and electric cable, among other materials. Low points included some pointless digital manipulation of found imagery and the inevitable complement of overly derivative work. The overall impression given by this otherwise welcome addition to a busy art calendar was of a biennial in which quantity was at least as important as quality. |
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