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Miguel Calderon: Andrea Rosen Gallery.


Who can blame Mexico City's artists for making a habit of investigating their home town in their work? At twenty million people and counting, theirs--as many an exhibition press release has stated--is a megalopolis megalopolis (mĕgəlŏp`lĭs) [Gr.,=great city], a group of densely populated metropolitan areas that combine to form an urban complex.  of extremes, characterized by vast disparities in wealth, the aftereffects aftereffects after nplNachwirkungen pl  of colonialism, and changes wrought by NAFTA NAFTA
 in full North American Free Trade Agreement

Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's
.

In Miguel Calderon's "Forcing the Force of Nature," the hometown connection was less striking than in his earlier work, but it's visible nonetheless. Calderon's "Chapultepec" photo series (all works 2003) features picnickers in the eponymous park whom he asked to "play dead" at their picnic tables for his camera. The resulting photos merge B-movie horror tableaux, images of Jonestown, and Le Dejeuner sur l'herbe. The series "Secundaria" is made up of eight class portraits of private secondary school students. The children--some in dress and some in athletic uniforms--sport aviator sunglasses, provided by Calderon, which make them look like all army of miniature dictators. The implication seems to be that this is exactly what these young members of Mexico's elite may one day turn into. "Falcon," a group of three photographs of Calderon's best friend from childhood riding a BMX BMX
abbr.
bicycle motocross


BMX
Noun

1. bicycle motocross: stunt riding over an obstacle course on a bicycle

2.
 bike through the city and tending a falcon, also references privileged urban adolescence.

The sculpture on view was less like sketch comedy “Sketch Show” redirects here. For for the British TV programme, see The Sketch Show.
Sketch comedy consists of a series of short comedy scenes, or 'sketches', commonly between one and ten minutes long.
 and more like a cartoon. The three-ton concrete Bar Rustico Montanoso--complete with a selection of liquors and four bar stools--riffs on a Mexico City Mexico City
 Spanish Ciudad de México

City (pop., 2000: city, 8,605,239; 2003 metro. area est., 18,660,000), capital of Mexico. Located at an elevation of 7,350 ft (2,240 m), it is officially coterminous with the Federal District, which occupies 571 sq mi
 trend of re-creating "rustic" folk bars for city dwellers, while Resistol 5000, three giant glue cans suspended over fiberglass pools of poured "glue," nods to the resourcefulness of urban teens bent on Adj. 1. bent on - fixed in your purpose; "bent on going to the theater"; "dead set against intervening"; "out to win every event"
bent, dead set, out to
 getting high. (Two other works rounded out the show: Moses Superstar, a video of the biblical prophet dancing in a traffic tunnel, and an English-language comic book comic book

Bound collection of comic strips, usually in chronological sequence, typically telling a single story or a series of different stories. The first true comic books were marketed in 1933 as giveaway advertising premiums.
 that Calderon cowrote with British artist Nick Waplington Photographer Nick Waplington was born in the U.K. in 1965. He studied art at Worthing Art College, Trent Polytechnic, and The Royal College in London.

He is noted for his conceptual approach to photography. He has also worked in other media such as installation and video art.
.)

There was lot here that looked familiar Calderon is aggressively juvenile and addicted to the aesthetics of the amusement park in a way that recalls Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy. But on the whole his shock tactics are milder; the "Falcon" photos in particular veer toward a more poetic, nostalgic--almost elegiac--brand of regression, along the lines of younger American like Slater Bradley or Ryan McGinley. (The photo of the falcon on the handlebars also strikingly recalls a work by McGinley shown in the same gallery last year.)

Calderon creates his own Mexico City: a kind of zany southern sitcom far more diverse--even mundane--than recent representations put together by outsiders, either the makers of Hollywood films (Traffic is one example) or exhibition curators (as with the dreary P.S. I exhibition of 2002, "Mexico City: An Exhibition About the Exchange Rates of Bodies and Values"). Calderon, thankfully, did little to translate his work through its layers of localness. It came off a bit like a dubbed television show: a slightly shaky hybrid, a happily unholy union--bad-boy post-Conceptualism with a big dose of Pop nostalgia, lobbed back across the border.
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Author:Schwendener, Martha
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Dec 1, 2003
Words:491
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