Mark Wallinger: Anthony Reynolds Gallery.Writing in Artforum on the 49th Venice Biennale Venice Biennale International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of , Benjamin H.D. Buchloh dismissed Mark Wallinger's work as a clear-cut instance of spectacle culture usurping art's previously oppositional spaces: Regurgitating "retardataire humanist, if not outright mythical or religious ... messages," work such as Wallinger's, declared Buchloh, imposes viewing conditions that prevent both "individual contemplation" and "simultaneous collective reception." Adding insult to injury, Buchloh branded Wallinger in this regard merely a "close second" to Bill Viola--the art world's "Billy Graham Noun 1. Billy Graham - United States evangelical preacher famous as a mass evangelist (born in 1918) Graham, William Franklin Graham ," in Wallinger's own, geographically precise estimation. Ouch. In the UK, where Wallinger's track record is better known and the more obviously politicized foundations (circa '80s to early '90s) of his recent work are assumed, Buchloh's summary condemnation must have raised as many hackles hackles the hairs over the neck and back that are elevated by arrector pili muscles in response to fright or anger. A mechanism to threaten opponents, perhaps by appearing larger. as eyebrows. But it also highlighted the precariousness of the artist's trajectory in recent years. Wallinger has argued that a "properly aggressive, critical and ironic [art] ... does not announce the position it is coming from." This show of just two works (three, if one includes concurrent screenings of the thirty-six-minute film The Lark Ascending [2004] at a nearby cinema) demonstrated both the centrality of Wallinger's policy of "nonannouncement" in his work--it is intrinsic to his investigation of language and representation--and the risks he courts deploying such a strategy. Via Dolorosa, 2002, for example, is an eighteen-minute video that silently replays the crucifixion sequence from Franco Zeffirelli's 1977 TV drama Jesus of Nazareth, with a black square obliterating o·blit·er·ate tr.v. o·blit·er·at·ed, o·blit·er·at·ing, o·blit·er·ates 1. To do away with completely so as to leave no trace. See Synonyms at abolish. 2. all but the extreme edge of the image. Emptying the film of its ostensible Apparent; visible; exhibited. Ostensible authority is power that a principal, either by design or through the absence of ordinary care, permits others to believe his or her agent possesses. content and laying bare the film's mechanics, rendering long shots, close-ups, and pans generic, the device voids the narrative's affective potential. Nevertheless, the near vacuum created is one into which projections and interpretations will inevitably rush, be they devout visions of Christ's sacrifice, accusations of retardataire religiosity re·li·gi·os·i·ty n. 1. The quality of being religious. 2. Excessive or affected piety. Noun 1. religiosity - exaggerated or affected piety and religious zeal religiousism, pietism, religionism , or polite art-historical speculation on the implications of imposing a monochrome rectangle onto an image of Christ. In Third Generation (Ascher Family), 2003, a screening of a Jewish family's home movies at Berlin's Jewish Museum has itself been videotaped (including interruptions, as museum visitors walk between camera and screen), rerun re·run n. The act or an instance of rebroadcasting a recorded movie or a recorded television performance. tr.v. re·ran , re·run, re·run·ning, re·runs To present a rerun of. on a second screen surrounded by a neutral surface, and videotaped a third time. As well as referencing previous work by Wallinger on the subject of eugenics eugenics (y jĕn`ĭks), study of human genetics and of methods to improve the inherited characteristics, physical and mental, of the human race. , the reframing reframing (rē·frāˑ·ming),n the revisiting and reconstruction of a patient's view of an experience to imbue it with a different usually more positive meaning in the process (like Via Dolorosa's) strips the original footage of any anticipated affective charge and refocuses viewers' attention on the utterly prosaic, inexpressive in·ex·pres·sive adj. 1. Lacking expression; blank: an inexpressive stare. 2. Devoid of emotion or style; flat or dull: an inexpressive violin performance. shufflings about of the museum's visitors. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In The Lark Ascending, a uniformly gray, slowly lightening cinema screen is accompanied by a doctored sound track: larks' song gradually rising from a comical, honking bass to a nearly correct pitch. Wallinger has noted laconically la·con·ic adj. Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent. [Latin Lac that the piece "does what it says on the tin." As well as being a subtle, unexportable joke about the monochrome (it's the slogan of a UK household-paint manufacturer), the comment underlines the banality, even ludicrousness, of this "transcendent" work's ingredients. Do gallerygoers need to be prevented from indulging their regressive cultural tendencies by having nice, strict, explicit political rubrics forced on them? Wallinger clearly thinks not: His works enact simple structural transformations on very specific mythic representations in order to turn them into test cases--demonstrating (among other things) just how slight the cues can become without the process of "reading in" being interrupted. But it's a precarious operation: Pointing to the mechanism can very easily look like reinforcing it. Wallinger places a lot of faith in his audience's capacity for self-reflection--for some critics, evidently, too much. |
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