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MEG CRANSTON.


VENETIA Venetia (vənē`shə), Ital. Veneto or Venezia Euganea, region (1991 pop. 4,380,797), 7,095 sq mi (18,376 sq km), NE Italy, bordering on the Gulf of Venice (an arm of the Adriatic Sea) in the east and on Austria in the north. KAPERNEKAS FINE ARTS, INC.

Outside certain Nazi circles, physiognomy
1. determination of mental or moral character and qualities by the face.
2. the countenance, or face.
3. the facial expression and appearance as a means of diagnosis.


phys·i·og·no·my (f
 did not enjoy a kind reception in the twentieth century. And even if it were revived today, teeth would not be likely candidates for analysis: Certain physical traits, such as height, are still irremediable in the twenty-first century, but teeth are not among them. In an age of modern dentistry and fluoridated water, "good" teeth are more common than at any other point in history--although, like almost everything else, they are also a reliable indicator of socioeconomic position. And with bonding and new whitening techniques, some teeth are even an index of wealth, like obesity in the Middle Ages or pale skin in the agricultural nineteenth century.

To walk through Meg Cranston Cranston, industrial city (1990 pop. 76,060), Providence co., central R.I., a residential suburb of Providence; inc. as a town 1754, as a city 1910. Its manufactures include machinery, plastics, rubber products, and chemicals. The city was named for Samuel Cranston, a colonial governor of Rhode Island. In the 19th cent., Cranston was an important textile center. The Friends Meeting House (1729) and several pre-Revolutionary buildings still stand.'s latest show, "Some Popular Subjects (teeth)," however, was to enter a gray area where "bad" teeth suddenly became "good." Rather than try to resurrect physiognomy for the old uses (say, identifying "criminal" traits), Cranston celebrates teeth for their own, inherent character, which is presumably extended to their owner. And the quirkier the teeth--crooked, chipped, buck, or brown--the better. This updated version of physiognomy was apparent in "Someone else with my teeth" (all works 2000), a series of black-and-white photographs in which the artist digitally inserted her own imperfect teeth into the mouths of celebrities, including those with notably funky sets of their own: John Lennon, David Bowie, and Eleanor Roosevelt. The effect was remarkable yet hard to identify at first, as with a recently shaved-off mustache. With famous faces, the lesson is clear: Bowie's teeth are like Barbra Streisand's nose--a signature rather than a flaw.

Naming Teeth offered an amusing alternative to giving nicknames to the fetishized parts of one's anatomy (a practice usually reserved for breasts, toes, and penises). Cranston's drawings of crooked and chipped teeth dubbed Lorelei Lorelei (lôr`əlī, Ger. lō`rəlī), cliff, 433 ft (132 m) high, on the right bank of the Rhine River, near St. Goarshausen, W Germany, about midway between Koblenz and Bingen., Oba, Dee, Charlene, Kurt, Kevin, and Keith culminated in the absurd and wonderful Naming Teeth (Robert Kennedy), in which a mouthful of teeth was labeled accordingly: Joseph Jr., John, Rosemary, Kathleen, Eunice

Eunice, in the Bible

Eunice (ynī`sē, y`nĭs), in the New Testament, Timothy's mother, a Christian.
, Patricia, Robert, Jean Ann (and a note: "Edward, not shown"). Two large color photos, Buck Tooth Beauty and Buck Tooth Beauty with Braces, documented the expressive teeth of a pair of young women close to the artist (an art student/professional dominatrix and Cranston's baby-sitter), while two paintings, Red Sporty and Big Red, with sets of teeth cast in a red field, reflected more abstractly on the theme. And the diminutive wood-and-plaster sculptures He Varies His Ills to Vary His Pleasure, with its buck-toothed bunny, and the informe Decidua
basal decidua , decidua basa´lis that portion directly underlying the chorionic sac and attached to the myometrium.
capsular decidua , decidua capsula´ris that portion directly overlying the chorionic sac and facing the uterine cavity.
, with its dual reference to "deciduous
1. Falling off or shed at a specific stage of growth, as teeth of the first dentition.
2. Of, relating to, or being the first or primary dentition.
" baby teeth and the uterine membrane shed at childbirth (the decidua), offered ruminations
1. the casting up of the food to be chewed thoroughly a second time, as in cattle.
2. in humans, the regurgitation of food after almost every meal, part of it being vomited and the rest swallowed: a condition sometimes seen in infants (rumination disorder) or in mentally retarded individuals.
3. meditation.
 on life, loss, and teeth in the animal kingdom, where utility overrides aesthetic concerns.

Ultimately what Cranston served up was a host of teeth-related ideologies, from the pseudoscientific to the hygienic hy·gien·ic (h-jnk, -j. But the message was insistently patriotic and pragmatic: Physical "imperfections" are markers of individuality, not flaws, and every good citizen should question the wisdom of "correcting" what isn't broken in the first place.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:art exhibition
Author:Schwendener, Martha
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2001
Words:505
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