Oyvind Fahlstrom: Feigen Contemporary. (New York)."Supertotalitarianism to preserve the world for the rich and powerful few..."; "Become bourgeois or else (US style)"; "BOOM for Whom?" It appears that Oyvind Fahlstrom has been reading the news. But no: The puckish puck·ish adj. Mischievous; impish: a puckish grin; puckish wit. puck ish·ly adv. and prolific painter, filmmaker, writer, and documentarian doc·u·men·tar·i·an also doc·u·men·ta·ristn. One that makes documentaries or a documentary. died in 1976 at the age of forty-seven. Born in Brazil and raised there and in Sweden, Fahlstrom was unabashedly political, exuberantly absurd, and dauntingly daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin prolific. He was at the forefront of the Concrete Poetry movement, something of an expert on Surrealist compositional techniques, and a pioneer in the use of both comic-book imagery and portraits of culturally charged figures like Chairman Mao (predating Lichtenstein and Warhol). Loopy, colorful, verbally and visually dense, the two-part exhibition featured approximately forty prints and multiples from the Bank One Art Collection as well as eleven rare drawings and paintings. Though the work on view represented only a fraction of Fahlstrom's output, it functioned as a primer for the career of an artist who--because of an early death, a radical, polymorphous oeuv re, or simply capricious history biding bide v. bid·ed or bode , bid·ed, bid·ing, bides v.intr. 1. To remain in a condition or state. 2. a. To wait; tarry. b. its time--is not yet considered the titan he should be, at least in American art circles. An article by Fahlstrom on "The Comics as an Art" appeared in a Swedish newspaper in 1954; in 1957, references to MAD Magazine began appearing in his work. In 1969, while he was researching Surrealist automatism, Mayan codices co·di·ces n. Plural of codex. , and Cagean compositional procedures, a trip to Los Angeles introduced him to the drawings of R. Crumb and Zap Comix com·ix pl.n. Comic books and comic strips, especially of the underground press: "the countercultural . . . comix of the sixties and early seventies, with their explicit criticism of American society" . These discoveries show up in Fahlstrom's prints, which buzz with a crowded, stickin'-it-to-the-Man kind of energy while achieving a multilayered and harmonious visual flow. With images based on jigsaw puzzles, dollar bills, and pie charts throughout, it's easy to see why Fahlstrom's work gets lumped under the rubric of Pop. But he doesn't really belong there. Notes 6 (Nixon's Dreams), 1974, for instance, shows a blue-faced, insomniac in·som·ni·ac n. One who suffers from insomnia. adj. Having or causing insomnia. Tricky Dick counting panthers jumping over a police barrier and an electrified map of South Vietnam lying on a catafalque cat·a·falque n. 1. A decorated platform or framework on which a coffin rests in state during a funeral. 2. Roman Catholic Church surrounded by gold bullion. Notes 7 ("Gook"-masks), 1971-75, a handcolored etching, depicts Smokey Bear, Angela Davis, Uncle Sam, of course, and personifications of Hiroshima and South Africa. What American Pop-ist would base an entire composition on snatches of poetry by Sylvia Plath (Sixteen Elements from "Chile I," 1976/89), or include in a dense, rollicking silkscreen a request addressed "Dear Picasso" that the artist remove Guemica from MOMA Moma (mō`mä), town, E central Mozambique. It is important mainly as a harbor for the export of tropical produce. until the United States withdraw from Southeast Asia (Column no. 2 [Picasso 90], 1973)? Fahlstrom's relative lack of critical lionization is belied by the fame of some of Pop's abject, punk-rock offspring whose work was prefigured in his--among them Raymond Pettibon, Matthew Ritchie, Carroll Dunham, and Mike Kelley. In fact, any contemporary artist who mixes words with pictures, sociocultural reference with dreamlike personal form, or writing and performance with painterly and graphic production is, to a certain degree, Fahlstrom's inheritor. There's little about this artist that isn't, still, en avant. Indeed, like the late Mark Lombardi, whose post-Conceptual depictions of political and financial malfeasance bear a distinct relation to this very body of work, Fahlstrom is an artist one wishes were here to comment now: Guernica, rejected by the UN in February 2003 as a too-embarrassing backdrop for a press conference on Iraq, has again become symbolic in the struggle against a crypto-imperialist US-led war, while the problem of creating effective agitprop agitprop Political strategy in which techniques of agitation and propaganda are used to influence public opinion. Originally described by the Marxist theorist Georgy Plekhanov and then by Vladimir Ilich Lenin, it called for both emotional and reasoned arguments. that maintains aesthetic independence is, of course, perennial. |
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