NILS NORMAN.AMERICAN FINE ARTS, Co. For the past decade Nils Norman has been devising a series of imaginative proposals for improving urban living conditions living conditions npl → condiciones fpl de vida living conditions npl → conditions fpl de vie living conditions living through community-based initiatives. He is no starry-eyed utopian, however: Norman is all too aware of how blind devotion to social progress under modernism has often been misguided and destructive. The foibles of dogma provide abundant material for an artist keen on uncovering hypocrisy. Norman has struck a careful balance between parodying visionary zeal and maintaining faith in alternative solutions to contemporary civic malaise. Typical of his approach was the recent show "Dismal Garden," in which several projects were displayed as a loose group. The sober side of Norman's practice was represented by a straightforward collection of photographs, mostly from his recent book The Contemporary Picturesque (Book Works, 2000). The artist investigated a wide range of urban "quality of life" restrictions on the gentrified streets of several major cities, documenting "bum-free railings," "anticlimb devices," etc. The antidote to such invidious in·vid·i·ous adj. 1. Tending to rouse ill will, animosity, or resentment: invidious accusations. 2. municipal planning can ostensibly os·ten·si·ble adj. Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity. be found in his own suggestions for more citizen-friendly policies: A poster recommends the construction of an "Edible Playscape" on the site of a traffic rotary in England; a pamphlet details the layout for an "Exploded School" that would give free art instruction in a nonhierarchical educational system. Norman's current undertaking, the Geocruiiser, offers a glimmer of hope for those who like their art to promote the common good. Developed with the Institute of Visual Culture in Cambridge and the Arts Council of Great Britain The Arts Council of Great Britain was a non-departmental public body dedicated to the promotion of the fine arts in Great Britain. The Arts Council of Great Britain was divided in 1994 to form the Arts Council of England (now Arts Council England}, the Scottish Arts Council, and , the Geocruiser is a fully functional bus complete with library, reading room, and photocopier photocopier Device for producing copies of text or graphic material by the use of light, heat, chemicals, or electrostatic charge. Most modern copiers use a method called xerography. (powered by solar panels on the roof) dedicated to spreading the word on eco-activism and "radical gardening," among other progressive topics. Production plans and meticulously crafted models for the bus were on view in the gallery; in August the full-size vehicle launched a yearlong tour, visiting sites around the UK and Europe. Taking a less specifically didactic tone was Dismal Garden, 2001, fifty-three computer-drawn color prints that present a comic narrative. They tell the gleefully glee·ful adj. Full of jubilant delight; joyful. glee ful·ly adv.glee sordid tale of the demise of art's oldschool traditions--embodied by a trendy dinner theater for artists and curators--which should open the way to a glorious "new zone of critical combat." The story features a lively and bizarre cast of characters who are led on a journey of discovery by the spectral images of Percy Bysshe Shelley and the caricaturist James Gillray, both active in England in the aftermath of the French Revolution. Other historical figures, including Rosa Luxemburg, Bertolt Brecht, and William Morris, dressed in current fashions (Prada, Gucci), rub elbows with eerie composites of contemporary art-world denizens. Too complicated and absurd to allow easy description, Norman's multilayered satire manages to simultaneously attack pretentious sartorial sar·to·ri·al adj. Of or relating to a tailor, tailoring, or tailored clothing: sartorial elegance. [From Late Latin sartor, tailor; see sartorius. posturing, point out the gradual dimming of revolutionary fires, and even poke fun at i ts own efforts. Participating in a long history of sociopolitical so·ci·o·po·li·ti·cal adj. Involving both social and political factors. sociopolitical Adjective of or involving political and social factors critique, Norman wisely acknowledges art's limited effectiveness, especially given today's narcissistic nar·cis·sism also nar·cism n. 1. Excessive love or admiration of oneself. See Synonyms at conceit. 2. A psychological condition characterized by self-preoccupation, lack of empathy, and unconscious deficits in , market-oriented scene. Yet he is not willing to give up the notion that art can offer a useful means of disseminating valuable information. Works like the Geocruiser attest to a continuing belief in the need to operate in a less hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air. her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal adj. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air. , public realm. |
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