Libby Black: Heather Marx Gallery.A cooked lobster, a tin of caviar, a golden Louis Vuitton champagne bucket containing a bottle of Cristal, and a Chanel picnic basket with a baguette protruding pro·trude v. pro·trud·ed, pro·trud·ing, pro·trudes v.tr. To push or thrust outward. v.intr. To jut out; project. See Synonyms at bulge. from it are spread on a Burberry blanket in a feast of name-brand luxury. All that's missing is the diner, who has kicked off her magenta Prada high heels and quit the scene. One clue to her mode of departure might be the nearby boat emblazoned with a cheerful floral motif more often applied to pricey handbags and fitted with a life preserver bearing the iconic LV monogram monogram [Gr.,=single letter], symbol of a name or names, consisting typically of a letter or several letters worked together. A famous monogram is that of Christ, consisting of X (chi) and P (rho), the first two letters of Christ in Greek. . The tableau, Picnic Set, 2005, was constructed by Libby Black, who made each life-size object by hand from paper, hot glue, and acrylic, and arranged them like props in a low-budget set for a high-society farce, a murder mystery, or an updated dramatization dram·a·ti·za·tion n. 1. The act or art of dramatizing: the dramatization of a novel. 2. A work adapted for dramatic presentation: of Manet's Dejeuner sur l'herbe. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Black has worked in this manner before, exhibiting a faux boutique at San Francisco's Manolo Garcia Gallery in 2003. More recently, for "Bay Area Now 4" at Yerba Buena yerba buena (yĕr`bə bwā`nə), trailing evergreen perennial (Micromeria chamissonis) of the family Labiatae (mint family). It is native to W North America and especially common to woodland areas along the Pacific coast. Center for the Arts, she fabricated a convincing replica of San Francisco's Kate Spade store, stocked with handbags, personal organizers, and shoes, and accompanied by a loungey sound track. The project marked an advance in terms of craft yet also marked the limit of this particular aspect of Black's practice. The strategy of remaking luxury designer goods in cheap materials in order to comment upon their questionable appeal and value was a strategy that had, it seemed, run its course. This show, Black's first at Heather Marx, found the artist extending her investigations in darker and more nuanced directions. The vividness of Black's sculptures was here tempered by eight more-pared-down, even somber, graphite drawings, based on magazine advertisements for high-end clothing. These sources are glossy and multicolored, but the works they have inspired are distinguished by a dull sheen and only one color. Rendered in a style that mixes assurance with naivete na·ive·té or na·ïve·té n. 1. The state or quality of being inexperienced or unsophisticated, especially in being artless, credulous, or uncritical. 2. An artless, credulous, or uncritical statement or act. , they suggest a melancholic mel·an·chol·ic adj. 1. Affected with or being subject to melancholy. 2. Of or relating to melancholia. narrative and a depth of feeling absent from the three-dimensional works. Burberry Horseman, 2004, for example, depicts a jockey in a forest landscape dressed in plaid pants and jacket and an antique helmet. Self-consciously theatrical, he could be a knight in shining armor or a dangerous psychopath psy·cho·path n. A person with an antisocial personality disorder, especially one manifested in perverted, criminal, or amoral behavior. . A comparable ambiguity appears in three drawings of fashion models. Louis Vuitton Woman, 2005, depicts a reclining Kate Moss type with well-coiffed hair and an impossibly beautiful face frozen in an expression of either ecstasy or pain. (Considered alongside those evacuated shoes and Gucci "Old Town" Canoe, 2005, the work acquires an Ophelian subtext.) Woman with Net, 2005, is a portrait in which the subject seems overwhelmed by a snood snood see frontal process (2). that covers her head. It evokes 1950s fashion photography, but again, the use of graphite hints at a tragic subtext, as the subject is trapped like a fairy-tale heroine. Black wisely punctuated the show with Flowers in a Vase with Gucci Purse, 2005, a still-life drawing based on an advertisement that parodies an art-historical precedent in which an abundant bouquet overpowers a tiny purse. The setup is modeled after a seventeenth-century Dutch vanitas
In the arts, vanitas painting, but by draining it of color, Black transforms it into a nature morte. Fashion, she reminds us, is an endless cycle of yearning, obsolescence ob·so·les·cent adj. 1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete. 2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed. , and rebirth, and in these works she captures the complex range of emotions that shadow the guilty pleasure of paying too much. --GH |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion