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Pal Gerber.


Pal Gerber's paintings of reworked "everyday" objects, scenarios and texts--torn from their original context, catapulted into an unarticulated un·ar·tic·u·lat·ed  
adj.
1.
a. Not articulated: our unarticulated fears.

b. Not carefully or thoroughly thought out.

2. Biology Not having joints or segments.
 gray space, where, to borrow from Gertrude Stein, "There's no 'there' there"--work in the space of the psyche, requiring a constant readjustment re·ad·just  
tr.v. re·ad·just·ed, re·ad·just·ing, re·ad·justs
To adjust or arrange again.



re
 on the part of the viewer, generating a quiet, incomprehensible shock. They seem to be at once something that is our own, and something remarkably foreign, unsettling un·set·tle  
v. un·set·tled, un·set·tling, un·set·tles

v.tr.
1. To displace from a settled condition; disrupt.

2. To make uneasy; disturb.

v.intr.
. His work typically consists of titles from a once-upon-a-time land and of images that recall people who have returned from vacation, their tans fading but still wearing the T-shirts they bought.

Gerber's latest series of monochrome paintings range in "object" matter from tree trunks, to the outline of Hungary, to a simplified maquette ma·quette  
n.
A usually small model of an intended work, such as a sculpture or piece of architecture.



[French, from Italian macchietta, sketch, diminutive of macchia, spot
 of a room emptied of everything except two crossed carpets. All sit, or rather hover, in Gerber's trademark gray land(mind)scapes. In A Szeretet Mindent Legyoz (Love overcomes everything, 1992), an unidentified surface, a saucer, a teacup, and a spoon float one above the other in an impossible feat of levitation levitation (lĕvĭtā`shən), the raising of a human or other body in the air without mechanical aid. The idea is ancient; holy men, both pagan and Christian, were reputed to have had the power of becoming light at will and of moving . The absurdity of the suspended object, and the exhausted sentiment attached to each, on one level asks us to suspend our disbelief. Seeming initially to court some involvement with the world, the piece is actually about a loss of primary engagement and the impulse for transcendence produced by this loss. In Besculetes Helytallas (Honorable reliability, 1992), a huge wheelless toy truck "stands" suspended, immovable, unusable. It recalls Martin Heidegger's anonymous placeholder--the best worker on the lot, the self as defined by others. It stands here inactive, in the abandoned lot of the ego, waiting for something else to take its place. It would, however, do the work a disservice to belabor be·la·bor  
tr.v. be·la·bored, be·la·bor·ing, be·la·bors
1. To attack with blows; hit, beat, or whip. See Synonyms at beat.

2. To assail verbally.

3.
 this comparison: the title echoes communist lingo, but, paradoxically, the work is actually antisymbolic in that it subverts the very referents it suggests. The truck is the placeholder/goodboy as well as its disappearance. It represents getting past the I-still-can't-quite-get-over-the fact-that-what- Mama-told-me-ain't-necessarily-so feeling. And, maybe finally, it is just a lumbering, awkward, incapacitated in·ca·pac·i·tate  
tr.v. in·ca·pac·i·tat·ed, in·ca·pac·i·tat·ing, in·ca·pac·i·tates
1. To deprive of strength or ability; disable.

2. To make legally ineligible; disqualify.
 toy truck, nothing more. The absurd is never lost on Gerber.

Out loud he may insist, as Eugene Ionesco has, that "There is nothing to understand ... there is no key ... no miracle," yet this sentiment seems to belie be·lie  
tr.v. be·lied, be·ly·ing, be·lies
1. To picture falsely; misrepresent: "He spoke roughly in order to belie his air of gentility" James Joyce.
 the work on the wall, work that is opaque, even dismal, but somehow survives. There may indeed be no key, no miracle, but the power of Gerber's work attests to the fact that something or somethings have meaning, even though we may be in a state of continually misplacing them.
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Title Annotation:Reviews; exhibit at Varfok Gallery, Budapest, Hungary
Author:Kingsley, Diana
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Apr 1, 1993
Words:425
Previous Article:Bertrand Lavier. (exhibit at Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna, Austria) (Reviews)
Next Article:Thomas C. Demand. (exhibit at Galerie Tanit, Munich, Germany) (Reviews)
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