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Phil Collins: Tanya Bonakdar Gallery.


In the nearly two decades since the Smiths broke up, the band's music seems to have become a lingua franca lingua franca (lĭng`gwə frăng`kə), an auxiliary language, generally of a hybrid and partially developed nature, that is employed over an extensive area by people speaking different and mutually unintelligible tongues in order to  for teens the world over who suspect that life is one big hatful of hollow. Photographer and video artist Phil Collins can attest that fans may be found in locales as far-flung as Bogota, Istanbul, and Jakarta--the sites of a multi-phase project for which Collins invites local adolescents to perform karaoke karaoke

(Japanese; “empty orchestra”)

Use of a device that plays instrumental accompaniments to songs with the vocal tracks removed, permitting the user to sing the lead.
 renditions of Smiths songs, capturing their moves and vocal stylings on video. The results thus far have been two exceedingly engaging (and unusually danceable) video installations: el mundo El Mundo can refer to:
  • El Mundo (Spain), Spanish newspaper
  • El Mundo (Colombia), Colombian newspaper based in Cartagena
  • El Mundo (Venezuela), Venezuelan newspaper
  • El Mundo (Puerto Rico), Puerto Rican newspaper
  • El Mundo (Argentina), Argentine newspaper
 no escuchara (The World Won't Listen), 2004, filmed in Bogota; and, shown here, dunya dinlemiyor (The World Won't Listen), 2005, filmed in Istanbul. (The Jakarta installment will be completed later this year.)

On view in the artist's first solo exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, dunya dinlemiyor reiterates the leveling effects of globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
: Istanbul's Smiths devotees wear the kind of trendy, hot-off-the-container-ship apparel that you might see in any big city, and Collins positions them against generic photo-studio backdrops (a forest, a beach). But the issue of national identity asserts itself in the work's Turkish title and in the Turkish flyers pasted on the gallery wall; Turkey's age-old status as a prime destabilizer of the idea of "Europe," currently evidenced in the debate over the country's EU membership, pressurizes the air bubble of placelessness. Within this fragile space, the unnamed singers use the well-known tunes as the basis of richly individual and frequently hilarious performances.

The other work on view at the gallery, a multimedia installation titled the return of the real / gercegin geri donusu, 2005, centers on a monitor-based video of a panel discussion that Collins convened at a hotel in Istanbul, in which ten people who had been on Turkish reality TV shows discussed their experiences. Some of the participants share life stories that are litanies of travails worthy of a soap opera soap opera

Broadcast serial drama, characterized by a permanent cast of actors, a continuing story, tangled interpersonal situations, and a melodramatic or sentimental style.
: A man named Cihan's problems (and televised notoriety) began when his preschool-age son accidentally killed a neighbor's baby and the authorities arrested him for his child's crime; a woman named Serpil was falsely reported to be a porn star by the tabloid press, and then raped. But others seem to have led mostly untroubled lives--having gone on television only to, say, get a nose job on a makeover show--and the counterpoint between banal and over-the-top becomes both disturbing and funny. In a separate gallery, five long interviews between individual panel participants and a Turkish television producer were shown (one per week for the five weeks of the show's run). These dual-channel video projections were set up so as to implicate im·pli·cate  
tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates
1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot.

2.
 viewers, situating them between interview subject and interlocutor in·ter·loc·u·tor  
n.
1. Someone who takes part in a conversation, often formally or officially.

2. The performer in a minstrel show who is placed midway between the end men and engages in banter with them.
.

Collins--who has re-created Andy Warhol's "Screen Tests Andy Warhol's Screen Tests consist of several-minute unbroken shots of Factory regulars, Warhol superstars, guests, friends, or anyone he thought has "star potential". Warhol would place them in a booth, and tell them to stare at the camera and not blink. " in Baghdad and staged a dance marathon This article is about Dance Marathon fundraisers. For the early 1900s events, see marathon dancing.

Over 30 years ago, the dance marathon started as a simple dance competition on the campus of Penn State University.
 in Ramallah--is known for works in which pop poetics po·et·ics  
n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb)
1. Literary criticism that deals with the nature, forms, and laws of poetry.

2. A treatise on or study of poetry or aesthetics.

3.
 blithely consort with weighty political themes. In a 2005 interview, the artist spoke of popular culture's "potential as a political form" and admiringly noted that Rainer Werner Fassbinder was surrounded by peers who "chose to believe in the modes of documentary, socialist realist traditions.... But [Fassbinder] said no, I want to use melodrama." Collins clearly has the same impulse, as in dunya dinlemiyor, in which pop music's histrionics--contemporary melodrama in its purest form--becomes a kind of avenue to autonomy, however provisional. Conversely, the return of the real might be construed as a critique of an era in which melodrama--that is, the reduction of narrative to a series of ritualized emotive gestures--is increasingly and speciously spe·cious  
adj.
1. Having the ring of truth or plausibility but actually fallacious: a specious argument.

2. Deceptively attractive.
 proposed, via reality TV and infotainment, as the organizing structure of lived experience itself.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:art exhibitions
Author:Schambelan, Elizabeth
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:604
Previous Article:Kelley Walker: Paula Cooper Gallery.(paintings and sculpture exhibitions)
Next Article:John Pilson: Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery.(video recordings)
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