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Oliver Herring: Max Protech. (New York).


The shimmer of Oliver Herring's signature knitted-Mylar sculptures made over the past decade reflects the influence of Ethyl Eichelberger, the performance artist and transvestite trans·ves·tite
n.
One who practices transvestism.


transvestite Sexology A person with a compulsion to dress as a member of the other sex, which may be essential to maintaining an erection and achieving orgasm. See Transsexual.
 whose career (abruptly ended by his AIDS-related suicide in 1991) inspired Herring to rethink his approach to materials. In a recent interview he observed, "[What] went to the heart of what Ethyl Eichelberger had done ... [was] making meaningful situations happen through very, very mundane means."

For the last ten years Herring has been coming up with new ways to do just that. In Raft, 1994, for instance, in which luminous garments seem suspended inside a spectral, cloudlike mattress, he has transformed the silvery Mylar into a nuanced metaphor for temporality tem·po·ral·i·ty  
n. pl. tem·po·ral·i·ties
1. The condition of being temporal or bounded in time.

2. temporalities Temporal possessions, especially of the Church or clergy.

Noun 1.
 and absence. In 1997 he turned to American comic books for his source material, knitting life-size three-dimensional figures of various vintage cartoon characters (Krazy Kat, Bone) as if to provide a foil for his forms' elegiac el·e·gi·ac  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or involving elegy or mourning or expressing sorrow for that which is irrecoverably past: an elegiac lament for youthful ideals.

2.
 "weight," only partially lightened by their delicate semitransparency. He soon began to explore video; a 1999 work shows the artist in stop-action arranging large geometric shapes in a room.

The centerpiece of this show was Herring's most ambitious (though still low-tech) foray into multimedia: A multiple-channel video titled Little Dances of Misfortunes, 2002, played on five monitors lined up side by side, accompanied by a piece of Baroque harp music edited and rearranged by the artist. For each video a series of motions was performed by phosphorescent-painted dancers in various costumes, moments of which were filmed. You see each "scene" only for a split second before the lights illuminating the performers are turned off, which creates a sudden dramatic fade to black. For a moment in the dark you see the bright lines of the glowing paint outlining the figures, and then comes the next glimpse, usually of a totally different grouping. A kaleidoscopic morphing is achieved through the rapid editing. Infused with energy and play, the piece renounces the solemnity SOLEMNITY. The formality established by law to render a contract, agreement, or other act valid.
     2. A marriage, for example, would not be valid if made in jest, and without solemnity. Vide Marriage, and Dig. 4, 1, 7; Id. 45, 1, 30.
 that pervaded much of Herring's earlier work.

Despite the panoply pan·o·ply  
n. pl. pan·o·plies
1. A splendid or striking array: a panoply of colorful flags. See Synonyms at display.

2.
 of visual effects, however, the simple choreography echoes Herring's other, humbler craft: It is as if the interlocking interlocking /in·ter·lock·ing/ (-lok´ing) closely joined, as by hooks or dovetails; locking into one another.
interlocking Obstetrics A rare complication of vaginal delivery of twins; the 1st
 knitted stitches have been exchanged for interlaced Refers to a display system or image that uses interlacing and does not render contiguous lines one after the other. See interlace and interlaced GIF.  painted figures. Capitalizing on the organic, generative nature of his work, Herring pushes his post-Minimalist process-oriented aesthetic center stage, where the formal concerns of repetition, mutation, and metaphor are taken apart and reanimated re·an·i·mate  
tr.v. re·an·i·mat·ed, re·an·i·mat·ing, re·an·i·mates
1. To give new life to: Her dancing reanimates the classical style.

2.
. Whether through pedestrian movements or more complex illusions, a mutable mu·ta·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Capable of or subject to change or alteration.

b. Prone to frequent change; inconstant: mutable weather patterns.

2.
 and far-reaching field of allusion is evoked. Little Dances pays homage to a host of theatrical and cinematic muses, including Chaplin and Keaton, whose physical personas are conjured in the videos' disconnected movement. From the awkward sight gags of early cinema to the mythic frolic Frolic - A Prolog system in Common Lisp.

ftp://ftp.cs.utah.edu/pub/frolic.tar.Z.
 of a Nijinsky-esque fawn, Little Dances's pastiche is both sophisticated and childlike.

Herring's concern for process and open-ended reference is revitalized with a refreshing nod to both the painterly and the performative--elements that have historically played out a fascinating dialogue, whether in the Abstract Expressionist choreography of Pollock or the hand-painted Pop staged by Johns. Included in the show are photographs from Little Dances's staging that serve to further accentuate Herring's method of juxtaposing abstract and figurative forms. These photos are a testament to the historical layering and restituted memories only a postmodern alchemist would want us to tap.
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Article Details
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Author:Klein, Mason
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:543
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