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ROBERT WATTS.


LESLIE TONKONOW ARTWORKS + PROJECTS

It's been a good year for Fluxus. With elegant shows recontextualizing the art of Yoko Ono and Ray Johnson in all its freewheeling experimentation and intelligence, George Maciunas's anarcho-good-time movement has been inscribing its details ever more precisely in the history books, where it serves as accomplice and antidote to the more lurid self-consciousness of Pop. Given the total institutionalization Institutionalization

The gradual domination of financial markets by institutional investors, as opposed to individual investors. This process has occurred throughout the industrialized world.
 of the latter, it's useful to keep in mind that during the late '60s in New York, Fluxus and Pop were growing up together as twins born of the same ironic, iconoclastic i·con·o·clast  
n.
1. One who attacks and seeks to overthrow traditional or popular ideas or institutions.

2. One who destroys sacred religious images.
 impulse. It was only later that market exigencies separated the siblings and Fluxus (the quiet, clever one) was eclipsed by Pop (the boisterous, entertaining one). Now that sufficient time has passed, it is possible to look back and see the family resemblance.

The moment is perfect for reconsidering Robert Watts, who never made a clear distinction between the ephemeral provocations of Fluxus and the gleeful satires of Pop. Watts taught for decades at Rutgers University, where he and his colleague Allan Kaprow amalgamated technological exploration, social gamesmanship games·man·ship  
n.
1. The art or practice of using tactical maneuvers to further one's aims or better one's position:
, and intellectual inquiry into Happenings and beyond, pioneering work in video, installation, and photographic appropriation. Out there in New Jersey, they broke ground for a whole wing of postmodernism, and Kaprow has gotten most of the credit. This exhibition is the latest installment in what amounts to Watts's widespread critical reinstatement in this country and Europe.

There is something impersonal or phlegmatic phlegmatic /phleg·mat·ic/ (fleg-mat´ik) of dull and sluggish temperament.

phleg·mat·ic or phleg·mat·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to phlegm.

2.
 in Watts's composition, a deliberately flattened sense of timing. This aspect of his work has not aged as gracefully as have his concerns with commodity and its absurdities. A puckish puck·ish  
adj.
Mischievous; impish: a puckish grin; puckish wit.



puckish·ly adv.
 wit remains where media and message are crisply meshed, as in Portrait Dress, 1965, a see-through vinyl frock with pockets for photographs, or the suite of neon signs in which the signatures of masters like Ingres, Duchamp, and Lichtenstein glow like ads. Other items in this show appeared dated, such as the Lucite sculptures with embedded photographs of food, or the painted plaster casts of bread lined up in a grayscale In computing, a grayscale or greyscale digital image is an image in which the value of each pixel is a single sample. Displayed images of this sort are typically composed of shades of gray, varying from black at the weakest intensity to white at the strongest, though in  row, but this was largely because their semiotic semiotic /se·mi·ot·ic/ (se?me-ot´ik)
1. pertaining to signs or symptoms.

2. pathognomonic.
 jokesterism has been so wholly assimilated by successors that it cannot startle startle /star·tle/ (stahr´tl)
1. to make a quick involuntary movement as in alarm, surprise, or fright.

2. to become alarmed, surprised, or frightened.
 now as it did then.

The films (shot in 16 mm and transferred to video) fared even less well. Their intimate scale, use of split screens and superimposed su·per·im·pose  
tr.v. su·per·im·posed, su·per·im·pos·ing, su·per·im·pos·es
1. To lay or place (something) on or over something else.

2.
 shots, and real-time sequencing are convincing early forays into what has become standard video vocabulary. But there is a cheerfully unexamined sexism in Watts's reliance on mute, naked girls performing neo-Dada acts of nonsense--the nubile nu·bile  
adj.
1. Ready for marriage; of a marriageable age or condition. Used of young women.

2. Sexually mature and attractive. Used of young women.
 brunette sticking random letters to her skin and passing a phallic, brightly colored object between her legs. Such performers are presented not as collaborators but as signs for "woman," synonymous with the unconscious--and fun to look at too! This automatic/associative frisson constituted the whole content of the films, which accordingly got pretty tedious.

Overall Watts revealed himself as less a visionary than an inventor, tinkering with reconfigurations of ideas as well as technologies. Benjamin Buchloh, an ardent supporter, has remarked that Watts fulfills Duchamp's dictum that the artist of the future "would have to work underground." One wonders who is working now, as Watts did then, in a noncareerist seclusion to be unearthed thirty years hence.
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Author:Richard, Frances
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2001
Words:546
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