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PAUL PFEIFFER.


THE PROJECT

A smash at both the Whitney Biennial and P.S.I's "Greater New York" and the inaugural recipient of the Whitney's Bucksbaum Award, Paul Pfeiffer is on everybody's shortlist of discoveries. Expectations were predictably high for his first solo exhibition since last spring's double triumph-but the results were mixed. Like any artist, when Pfeiffer is mediocre, he's mediocre. Unlike most, however, when he's good, he's brilliant.

The show opened with an oversize bathtub installed complete with tiled walls, plastic curtain, and running shower (all works 2000). The 1:1 1/2 scale brought on a pleasant sense of dislocation, but the tub was surrounded by a metal superstructure that interrupted the viewer's physical engagement with the work and diminished the effect of the enlargement. Cameras mounted on this armature armature, in art: see sculpture.
Armature

That part of an electric rotating machine which includes the main current-carrying winding.
 fed black-and-white close-ups of the shower's interior to a split-screen monitor located in an adjacent room. The press release explained that the tub was a blown-up reproduction of the Bates Bates   , Katherine Lee 1859-1929.

American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911.
 Motel fixture in Psycho and that the work's title was Self-Portrait as a Fountain, after the well-known 1966-67 photograph of Bruce Nauman spitting a stream of water. Without these clues, the piece fell flat. But with them, it turned hyperbolic hy·per·bol·ic   also hy·per·bol·i·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or employing hyperbole.

2. Mathematics
a. Of, relating to, or having the form of a hyperbola.

b.
. Cleverness flickered in the nod to surveillance cameras (we watched Pfeiffer watching Hitchcock and Nauman--and by extension, Douglas Gordon), but the auteur auteur (ōtör`), in film criticism, a director who so dominates the film-making process that it is appropriate to call the director the auteur, or author, of the motion picture.  references had a tacked-on feel, and the video was surprisingly dull.

Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (əpŏk`əlĭps), allegorical figures in the Book of Revelation in the Bible. The rider on the white horse has many interpretations—one is that he represents Christ; the rider on the red horse is  was likewise a combination of overdetermined Overdetermined can refer to
  • Overdetermined systems in various branches of mathematics
  • Overdetermination in various fields of psychology or analytical thought
 content and underrealized form. The clouds of washed-out color in this quartet of large Cibachromes were appealing, but again, the work's impact depended on a combination of title and underlying concept. The title, of course, recalls Albrecht Durer's fifteenth-century woodcut woodcut

Design printed from a plank of wood incised parallel to the vertical axis of the wood's grain. One of the oldest methods of making prints, it was used in China to decorate textiles from the 5th century.
 personifying Death, Famine, War, and Pestilence pestilence /pes·ti·lence/ (pes´ti-lins) a virulent contagious epidemic or infectious epidemic disease.pestilen´tial

pes·ti·lence
n.
1.
. The images, meanwhile, derive from studio portraits of Marilyn Monroe; the love goddess has been digitally erased, leaving only strangely atmospheric backdrops. Nearby, 24 Landscapes, a group of blandly pretty, unpopulated ocean photographs, was based on another well-known Monroe sequence. Had Pfeiffer managed to embed the Monroe connection in the images themselves, their air of mournful immanence would have clicked. As it was, their content--presumably a meditation on cultural icons, disappearance, and memory--relied too heavily on unintegrated information.

Disappointment over these works, however, evaporated before Pfeiffer's magisterial video sculpture The Long Count (I Shook Up the World). Cantilevered from the wall on a long arm, a small LCD monitor seemed to levitate lev·i·tate  
intr. & tr.v. lev·i·tat·ed, lev·i·tat·ing, lev·i·tates
To rise or cause to rise into the air and float in apparent defiance of gravity.
, forcing viewers to gaze upward in an attitude of devotion. In silvery near-black-and-white, The Long Count pans across the shouting crowd at a boxing match; 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.
 details fix the date as the mid-'60s. The ring is foregrounded, but there are no boxers in it, just a kind of undulating presence, like tremors in a sheet of mercury. All the fans are white; it might occur to the viewer that the missing boxers probably are black. In the time it takes to think these thoughts, it registers that the film's surface disturbance limns the feinting, jabbing pugilists, whose bodies have been digitally removed. Expunged as objects of voyeuristic fixation, the athletes remain as mobile plasma animating the scene, a scrim scrim  
n.
1. A durable, loosely woven cotton or linen fabric used for curtains or upholstery lining or in industry.

2. A transparent fabric used as a drop in the theater to create special effects of lights or atmosphere.
 through which the audience in the gallery confronts the audience in the arena, while Pfeiffer and his technological manipulations face down the still photographers crouching ringside. Race and history, sport and violence coalesce in a single frame. The phrase "the long count" refers to an unduly extended knockout count--in other words, to an artificially lengthened moment of closure and demise. Pfeiffer's work invites the moving image to betray itself as an unreliable zone of motionless time and compressed space, in which even spectacular events and iconic presences are reduced to the condition of Pfeiffer's fighters: their substance leached away, their mass etherealized--and theatricalized--as pulse and suggestion. The simple work is spellbinding spell·bind  
tr.v. spell·bound , spell·bind·ing, spell·binds
To hold under or as if under a spell; enchant or fascinate.



[Back-formation from spellbound.
 and needs no supporting context. However, when one learns that the particular bout in The Long Count is Cassius Clay's epic 1964 defeat of Sonny Liston, the piece takes on an even sharper edge. This is video deployed as a truly autonomous form, one that is uniquely situated to reveal and interrogate its own complicitous role in the production of cultural power. It is a form that Pfeiffer has clearly mastered.
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Title Annotation:artist, wins Whitney's Bucksbaum Award, exhibition
Author:Richard, Frances
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2001
Words:704
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