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RENAISSANCE SOCIETY.


HELEN MIRRA

Spread out on the malt brown floor of the Renaissance Society this summer were 110 equilateral triangles of indigo cloth partially sewn together in a segmented field: Helen Mirra's Sky-Wreck, 2001. Responding to the architecture of the space, with its vaulted ceilings, metal bracings, and polyhedral polyhedral /poly·he·dral/ (-he´dril) having many sides or surfaces.

polyhedral

having many sides or surfaces.
 floor plan, the triangles were interwoven in·ter·weave  
v. in·ter·wove , in·ter·wo·ven , inter·weav·ing, inter·weaves

v.tr.
1. To weave together.

2. To blend together; intermix.

v.intr.
 as interdependent hexagons, pyramids, and parallelograms--something like a complicated chemical notation. The cloth panels were linked in a winding chain; Mirra stitched along one, two, or three edges of each triangle, rendering the whole assemblage a continuous meander of triangle groups in various configurations. with interstices of floor showing.

Sky-Wreck is a confluence of a kind of blue-collar minimalist conceptualism conceptualism, in philosophy, position taken on the problem of universals, initially by Peter Abelard in the 12th cent. Like nominalism it denied that universals exist independently of the mind, but it held that universals have an existence in the mind as concept. , a working-class meeting of Dorothea Rockburne and Buckminster Fuller. It systematically employs a core geometric form, abstract and machine made--but the machine is a loom, a prototechnology close to handicraft handicraft: see arts and crafts. , rooted in labor and traditionally tied to "women's work" The occasional open spaces within the triangular grid and the inconsistencies in the dyeing and weave of the cloth make this more relaxed than rigorous. It is serious, perhaps even dour, this universe laid our to dry, something impalpable impalpable /im·pal·pa·ble/ (im-pal´pah-b'l) not detectable by touch.

impalpable

not detectable by touch.
 made concrete, a firmament constructed somewhat wistfully around the human desire for reason and control. Its geometry is poetic, as is its intent, and it offers less a call to order than a vehicle for dreaming.

The unassuming nature of Mirra's homespun textiles and the methodical schematization sche·ma·tize  
tr.v. sche·ma·tized, sche·ma·tiz·ing, sche·ma·tiz·es
To express in or reduce to a scheme: a diagram that schematizes the creation and consumption of wealth.
 of the installation itself set up a curious encounter, a meeting that suggests, if not the sacred and the profane, then the physical and the metaphysical. Indeed, the piece was accompanied by wall text that cites the source of the title (a poem by Paul Celan) and signage indicating that the work is essentially a flattened scale model of the sky, part of a geodesy geodesy (jēŏd`ĭsē) or geodetic surveying, theory and practice of determining the position of points on the earth's surface and the dimensions of areas so large that the curvature of the earth must be taken into  that could be constructed as an icosahedral icosahedral

a regular polyhedron with 20 triangular faces, 12 corners and 30 sides, having cubic symmetry with 5:3:2-fold axes. A common structural form for the capsid of many viruses including herpesviruses, adenoviruses, parvoviruses, reoviruses, picornaviruses and retroviruses.
 dome of 1, 210 triangles. According to the artist's measurements, if the arrangement of triangles were multiplied by eleven, elevated, and increased in scale by 333 times, this installation could line the heavens. Mirra does not so much sculpt the sky as provide a kind of imaginative mapping of it: The fabric at our feet transports us to the immensity above. (It is a kind of anti-magic carpet, however, since in its current profile we experience the piece from the "wrong" Side, from outside the sky.)
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Title Annotation:Helen Mirra's Sky-Wreck, 2001
Author:Yood, James
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2001
Words:397
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