Martin Boyce: Galerie Eva Presenhuber.It seems fitting that an exhibition of Martin Boyce's work--the forms and materials of functional apparatus transferred to an artistic context--should be presented in the complex of galleries and museums at the heart of Zurich's regenerated industrial quarter. Acclaimed for his appropriation and deconstruction of designer icons from the '60s and '70s, Boyce now seems to be shifting his interest to the psychological and emotional spaces of more generic external environments. From the utopian vision of modernism propagated by the Eameses or Arne Jacobsen Arne Jacobsen (February 11, 1902 – March 24, 1971) was a Danish architect and designer, exemplar of the "Danish Modern" style. Among his architectural achievements are St Catherine's College, Oxford, work at Merton College, Oxford, the Radisson SAS Royal Hotel, , he has turned to communal urban spaces--in this case, the swimming pool--that people occupy and make their own. The specially constructed chain-link fencing, beach chairs, garbage cans, and abstracted beach-umbrella shapes hover between their immediately recognizable functional origins and the sculptural narrative they aspire to aspire to verb aim for, desire, pursue, hope for, long for, crave, seek out, wish for, dream about, yearn for, hunger for, hanker after, be eager for, set your heart on, set your sights on, be ambitious for . The main gallery was occupied by an installation that drew out the slightly oppressive atmosphere of the space. A hinged "door," constructed from a white metal beach chair laid over a more abstract grill mesh, operated graphically--a two-dimensional sculpture. It also declared some of the key ideas in the exhibition, from the swimming pool theme to Boyce's ongoing preoccupation with the extended grid structures that characterize built environments, as well as the refusal of the objects to fit neatly within a single medium. The grid, together with another stalwart in Boyce's vocabulary, the spider-web, appeared in the three beach chairs and the radiating ra·di·ate v. ra·di·at·ed, ra·di·at·ing, ra·di·ates v.intr. 1. To send out rays or waves. 2. To issue or emerge in rays or waves: Heat radiated from the stove. neon strips of the five parasols. The sole source of light in the room, these recalled a Beckettian stage set filtered through comic-book reductionism reductionism(rē·dukˑ·sh [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The swimming pool theme was amplified in the second space, where a drain set into the floor indicated a sewage system sewage system Collection of pipes and mains, treatment works, and discharge lines (sewers) for the wastewater of a community. Early civilizations often built drainage systems in urban areas to handle storm runoff. and therefore conceptually linked the gallery space with the outside. Echoing the slanted waste bins, the drain was also shaped as a parallelogram parallelogram, closed plane figure bounded by four line segments, or sides, with opposite pairs of sides parallel and equal in length. The rhombus, rectangle, and square are special types of parallelograms. . Only this minimal distortion called attention to its status as sculpture, thereby highlighting the constructed nature of the other elements with which it shared the situational context. A coiled, yellow metal tube recalled a hose pipe but bore the minimal but intense color that is so important to Boyce's work. A white beach chair on its side conveyed the impression of a recently abandoned pool; its height also contrasted with the other elements to structure the space, forming a composition to be read from various angles, a kind of three-dimensional painting. In contrast, the garbage can in the adjoining space was warped so exaggeratedly, comic-book style, that its pent-up energy threatened to disrupt the controlled stillness elsewhere. This touch of humor provided a welcome counterpoint to the otherwise mute hermeticism Hermeticism or Hermetism Italian Ermetismo Modernist poetic movement originating in Italy in the early 20th century. Works produced within the movement are characterized by unorthodox structure, illogical sequences, and highly subjective language. of the exhibition. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion