Michael Asher.It took Michael Asher For the explorer, see . Michael Asher is a conceptual artist known since the late 1960s for site-specific installations that offer a critique of art institutions. Rather than designing new art objects, Asher typically alters the existing environment, by repositioning or removing five years to complete his project here. It focuses on the architect of the Palais des Beaux beaux n. A plural of beau. Arts, Victor Horta, who created buildings that are the embodiment of art-nouveau architecture in Belgium. In the Horta Museum The Musée Horta (French) or Hortamuseum (Dutch) is a museum dedicated to the life and work of the Belgian Art Nouveau architect Victor Horta and his time. The museum is housed in Horta's former house and atelier (1898) in the Brussels municipality of Saint-Gilles. Asher had found a small publication in which Horta had published his photographs of various water-works projects by William Mulholland William Mulholland (September 11 1855 – July 22 1935) was a water-services engineer in Southern California, United States. He was born in Belfast, Ireland (now Northern Ireland) and emigrated to New York City in the 1870s with his brother Hugh Mulholland and traveled . Perhaps it was this book that inspired Asher to consider Horta and Mulholland together. Mulholland became famous in 1928 when a dam he had constructed in the vicinity of Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. burst. Both men were represented in the first room by a chronology of their most important projects, in the second by journalistic information about their work. It is perhaps "deformation deformation /de·for·ma·tion/ (de?for-ma´shun) 1. in dysmorphology, a type of structural defect characterized by the abnormal form or position of a body part, caused by a nondisruptive mechanical force. 2. " and not "information" that was presented here since only partial views of their works were shown. On one side there were pictures and reports of the dam break, stills from Roman Polanski's Chinatown, 1974, an explanation of the film, and historical background on dam construction. It is believed that Mulholland had instigated--together with local authorities--a merciless water policy that allowed him to become rich, but that also signaled the end of his career. Across from these, there were enlargements from American newspapers that mention Horta's lecture tour from 1915-19. Horta used his lectures to pronounce his hatred for the Germans, who had invaded Belgium a few days after the outbreak of World War I. Horta posited that German spies had obtained plans of Brussels' infrastructure and were using this knowledge to destroy the city systematically from inside. Primarily though, he lamented the Germans' destruction of churches and other architectural monuments. The American reports of this lecture tour come mainly from smaller regional newspapers, but they are usually first-page articles. Both Horta and Mulholland find their way into the media through destruction, both are synonomous with action. The reporting about Horta increased around 1917; the mentions of Mulholland correspond to a kind of yellow journalism yellow journalism: see newspaper. yellow journalism In newspaper publishing, the use of lurid features and sensationalized news in newspaper publishing to attract readers and increase circulation. that leaves little room for explanation. Even today it is difficult to gain access to the records of this tragedy. Asher closes the section on Horta with texts from a Dutch film that used Horta's buildings as a backdrop. In this film he represents the haute-bourgeoisie, the end of an era; Mulholland's contribution to the history of Los Angeles, on the other hand, is linked to the kind of corruption that is not merely historical. Asher presents both men as types: the exhibition site is like a book, the rooms the open pages in which contextual and real relationships are juxtaposed jux·ta·pose tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast. , from which the viewer must construct meaning. |
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