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Michael Minelli: Michael Kohn Gallery.


The head of a nurse, an Arab woman in Niqab, and a cicatrized, monocled Daddy Warbucks-like man stare at the viewer blankly, not even asking, in the manner of De Niro's Travis Bickle, You lookin' at me? The problems inherent to representing in sculpture both the act of looking and the information provided by a specific face account only partially for the strange power of Michael Minelli's second solo show. Where previously he proffered totemic, gleefully gaudy Bruce Conner--esque assemblages or combined the bodies of various televisual and cinematic stars to make small, meticulous figurative fetish sculptures (quietly deranging the Greek ideal of a body by constructing seemingly seamless wholes made up of disparate parts (a Mia Farrow--ish torso, say, topped with Yoda's noggin), with his new pieces something only apparently simpler but in the end more disturbing goes on. Minelli deploys a variety of stylizations and stereotypes to create a nostalgic rainbow coalition of silent talking heads from a nonexistent global village--tribal cannibal (all works 2004), wealthy flapper, efficient mid-level manager--that convey everything and nothing through contradictory looks. It's as if a manic Geppeto began making the puppets for an adult version of It's a Small World After All but never got beyond the tops.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Minelli capitalizes on, well, a weird proto-neo-social realism while managing to recall the tender three-dimensional portraiture of John Ahearn. Tuned in to the bombardment of fictional characters, "real" personages, and liminal liminal /lim·i·nal/ (lim´i-n'l) barely perceptible; pertaining to a threshold.

lim·i·nal (lm
 figures broadcast and eerily equalized or flattened by television (I hesitate to suggest by contemporary life), Minelli succeeds in applying the vernaculars of Disneyland and Norman Rockwell to Hogarth- and Daumier-like ends. Three piezo prints, Rotunda, Usual Suspects No. 1, and Usual Suspects No. 2, make this democratization(?) abundantly clear: They work almost as a pictorial manifesto, positioning, centrifugally, an entourage of various types--a Koons bunny, a Forcefield troglodyte (jargon) troglodyte - (Commodore) 1. A hacker who never leaves his cubicle. The term "Gnoll" (from Dungeons & Dragons) is also reported.

2. A curmudgeon attached to an obsolescent computing environment. The combination "ITS troglodyte" was flung around some during the Usenet and e-mail wringle-wrangle attending the 2.x.x revision of the Jargon File; at least one of the people it was intended to describe adopted it with pride.
, Flip Wilson as Geraldine, Colin Powell-around empty blue sky and puffy clouds, a placid, what-me-worry view his heads deny. Purposefully flirting with caricature, his busts provide reason to question how, why, and exactly when Western human typologies coalesced (post--World War II, during "robust" American expansion?), in order to consider what it means to see them now.

At times, the politics of Minelli's head games remain intractable but palpable--a calm, helmeted soldier girl in camouflage hangs next to a vibrant yellow ski-capped terrorist--secured from any straightforward ideological narrative. If some heads evoke, intentionally, a frisson of "political incorrectness," perhaps we could begin by asking, Why some and not others? To position a stoic monkey in an astronaut's space suit as the final figure plots a point on a strange daisy chain
Daisy Chain
A group of unscrupulous investors who, practicing a kind of fictitious trading or wash selling, artificially inflate the price of a security so that they sell it at a profit.

Notes:
Investors who do not look carefully at a stock are the usual prey of a daisy chain. As a stock rises due to increased volume, investors who didn't do all their homework may be attracted to the stock because they want to participate in the rising price.
 of connections, becoming perhaps a gloss on our Marsgazing commander in chief, disinherited disinherit v. to intentionally take actions to guarantee that a person who would normally inherit upon a party's death (wife, child or closest relative) would get nothing. Usually this is done by a provision in a will or codicil (amendment) to a will which states that a specific person is not to take ("my son, Robert Hands, shall receive nothing," "no descendant of my hated brother shall take anything on account of my death. of the Great Communicator's mantle, settling for Bonzo's; monkeyhead situates itself just as quickly as a nod to our possible Planet of the Apes future.

The longer one stares at these sculptures, the more their seeming craft and construction begins, crucially, subtly, to acknowledge itself and fall apart. Hunchback hunchback /hunch·back/ (hunch´bak) old term for kyphosis, now considered offensive. ogles, walleyed
1. Having a walleye.
2. Affected with walleye.
3. Having large bulging or staring eyes.
4. Having eyes with distended pupils.
 (one agog, the other cataracted, so that the globes resemble one of the creature's teeth, which are about the size of the buttons on his collar). Where most of Minelli's heads gawp, taking in the viewer as only the inanimate can, hunchback discombobulates looking: Consider how Hugo's monster stood for looking past surface toward the unseen interior. That difficulty seeing should represent ours.
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Title Annotation:Los Angeles
Author:Hainley, Bruce
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Sep 1, 2004
Words:565
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