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MEYER VAISMAN.


GAVIN BROWN'S ENTERPRISE

Reading the art criticism that accompanied Meyer Vaisman's late-'80s rise from East Village scenester to neo-geo celebrity, you can't help but notice how certain adjectives keep cropping up: cynical, calculated, and above all, slick. I'd happily wager that not one of these words occurs to viewers of Barbara Fischer/Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, 2000. Pathetic, maybe, or perhaps even grotesque--but definitely not slick.

The star of Barbara Fischer/Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy is Barbara Fischer herself, or rather a life-size fiberglass cast fiberglass cast

a cast made of a water activated polyurethane resin incorporated into a bandage; used for fractured limbs. Has the virtues of very light weight, great strength and very quick setting.
 of her naked body. Fischer, who happens to be Vaisman's former longtime therapist, is hardly the usual artist's model. She's homely, middle-aged, and distinctly overweight, and the fiberglass 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.
 records every detail of her sagging flesh. In a gesture that recalls the films of Federico Fellini, Vaisman has sat Fischer on a plywood pedestal, draped her in yards and yards of hot-pink tulle Tulle (tl, Fr. tül), town (1990 pop. 18,685), capital of Corrèze dept., S central France. Firearms and other goods are made there. Tulle was built around a 7th-century monastery. , stuck a jester's cap on her head, and covered her eyes with mirrored sunglasses. Like some carnival sideshow See Windows SideShow.  Madonna, the therapist cradles a harlequin costume made of Vaisman's parents' cast-off cast·off  
n.
1. One that has been discarded.

2. Printing A calculation of the amount of space a manuscript will occupy when set into type.

adj. also cast-off
Discarded; rejected.
 clothes in her outstretched out·stretch  
tr.v. out·stretched, out·stretch·ing, out·stretch·es
To stretch out; extend.


outstretched
Adjective
 arms.

A fat old lady swathed in pink tulle is laughable, to say the least. But it's also kind of heartbreaking-and a surprisingly effective metaphor for our own intense, but often impotent, desires for self-transformation. May, 2000, installed on the gallery's opposite wall, echoes this theme. Six lit votive candles are adorned with photographic decals of a scowling scowl  
v. scowled, scowl·ing, scowls

v.intr.
To wrinkle or contract the brow as an expression of anger or disapproval. See Synonyms at frown.

v.tr.
 Vaisman sitting in a playground dressed in the motley harlequin outfit-as if therapy led not to self-realization but to the creation of an endless series of inauthentic alter egos designed to placate a jealous psychoanalytic god.

Above all, Barbara Fischer/Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy is an emblem of perhaps the most mysterious--and, on some level, certainly the most absurd--aspect of psychoanalytic treatment: transference TRANSFERENCE, Scotch law. The name of an action by which a suit, which was pending at the time the parties died, is transferred from the deceased to his representatives, in the same condition in which it stood formerly. , or the projection of primal feelings about one's parents (ranging from excessive idealization idealization /ide·al·iza·tion/ (i-de?il-i-za´shun) a conscious or unconscious mental mechanism in which the individual overestimates an admired aspect or attribute of another person.  to utter contempt) onto the neutral figure of the analyst. This particular case seems to involve Vaisman's narcissistic fantasy of himself as the impossibly perfect martyr of a (failed?) encounter with the therapistcum-mother, whose unconditional love is still not strong enough to resurrect her stricken son. Or, conversely, as the paranoid child who must simultaneously evade and conform to the expectations of a monstrous, omnipotent adult. Either way, Vaisman's allegory of psychoanalysis is less cynical than so unflinchingly honest about its own indulgence and self-loathing that it earns a kind of redemptive grace.

With Barbara Fischer/Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, Vaisman (like his neo-geo compatriot com·pa·tri·ot  
n.
1. A person from one's own country.

2. A colleague.



[French compatriote, from Late Latin compatri
 Ashley Bickerton) appears to be rethinking those late-'8os truisms that heralded the subject as an infinitely malleable "construction" and likened its mechanisms to the commodity object. Not to suggest that Vaisman has jettisoned his earlier stance in favor of a more romantic view of the self. In Barbara Fischer/Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, there is no "true" self waiting offstage to make its grand debut. But whereas Vaisman's early work addressed the subject's endless circulation through networks of distribution and exchange, Barbara Fischer/Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy emphasizes precisely those areas of deepest immobility in a self that, although ultimately no less empry, feels infinitely more complex.
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Article Details
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Author:Sundell, Margaret
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2000
Words:522
Previous Article:ULRIKE OTTINGER.(Brief Article)
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