Lily Van Der Stokker: Galleria Francesca Kaufmann. (Milan).Dutch artist Lily van der Stokker covered the exterior of an entire building with white on pink decorative motifs for Expo 2000 in Hannover. Adjusting this ornamental gigantism gigantism, condition in which an animal or plant is far greater than normal in size. Plants are often deliberately bred to increase their size. However, among animals, gigantism is usually the result of hereditary and glandular disturbance. to the more ordinary dimensions of an interior gallery space, the artist perhaps allowed more subtlety to come into play. Large sinuous sinuous /sin·u·ous/ (sin´u-us) bending in and out; winding. sinuous bending in and out; winding. lines delineating fuchsia fuchsia: see evening primrose. fuchsia Any of about 100 species of flowering shrubs and trees in the genus Fuchsia (family Onagraceae), native to tropical and subtropical regions of Central and South America and to New Zealand and Tahiti. or similarly syrupy-colored flowers, typical of the artist's style, were repeated uniformly. There was a difference in the treatment of the gallery's two rooms that, though it was not obvious at first, ultimately revealed the conceptual dimension of van der Stokker's work, despite its apparent banality. The untitled wall painting in the first room--which is the gallery proper, the exhibition space--was conceived as the work to be "shown"; it was thus presented in the empty room. The adjacent room is a functional space (the office), and it was likewise decorated with analogous floral volutes, in the same patently mawkish mawk·ish adj. 1. Excessively and objectionably sentimental. See Synonyms at sentimental. 2. Sickening or insipid in taste. adolescent style. In this space, however, the decoration was intended simply as decoration, and the wall painting assumed the function of simple wallpaper. In fact, a careful observer might have noted that in one area of the wall the painted motifs ran into each other with some confusion, the way patterns fail to line up properly when one does a poor job of applying wallpaper. Moreover, the change in function from one room to the other was evident despite the consistency in style. On the office wall van der Stokker chose to hang some small drawings related to previous wall-painting projects, all accompanied by an image of a sofa, which, in her drawings, always indicates the work's domestic, utilitarian fulfillment. Naturally, van der Stokker's intentions are polemical po·lem·ic n. 1. A controversial argument, especially one refuting or attacking a specific opinion or doctrine. 2. A person engaged in or inclined to controversy, argument, or refutation. adj. . The kitsch (I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. how else to define it) of her colors and forms seems to have emerged from the notebooks of a daydreaming female student--one devoid of any visual culture. But simply by contrasting these motifs with the seriousness of the art discourse into which she interpolates them, van der Stokker seems to denounce art's detachment from the quotidian quotidian /quo·tid·i·an/ (kwo-tid´e-an) recurring every day; see malaria. quo·tid·i·an adj. Recurring daily. Used especially of attacks of malaria. reality of ordinary people. And she addresses that reality's aesthetic implications, even those pertaining to subcultures about which we never have anything to say. A title typical of her small drawings is Spectacular Experimental Art by Older People, 2000, a nd she herself--not yet fifty--defines "old" in response to the hysterical pursuit of the "new in the culture industry. These painted walls also inevitably brought to mind the utterly precise, masculine rationalism of an artist like Sol Le Witt, to whose work van der Stokker presents a deliberate contrast. Her art questions the distinction between the beautiful and the ugly, the meaning of creativity and aesthetic self-expression, and the place of pure pleasure (even when it is regressive re·gres·sive adj. 1. Having a tendency to return or to revert. 2. Characterized by regression. re·gres ) within intellectual experience. She carries out this 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. with operations that become provocative simply because they are not legitimized by the art system's established conventions. Translated from Italian by Marguerite Shore. |
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