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Rachel Feinstein: Marianne Boesky Gallery.


The announcement for Rachel Feinstein's second solo exhibition at Marianne Boesky Gallery featured neither the artist's trademark brummagem-Baroque sculptures nor her lesser-known paintings. Rather, the oversize o·ver·size  
n.
1. A size that is larger than usual.

2. An oversize article or object.

adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized
Larger in size than usual or necessary.

Adj. 1.
 folded mailer reproduced a photograph that, though not included in the show, clearly informed it. A very old woman, wearing a pristine fur coat and enormous, lilac-tinted, bug-eye shades beams at us. Her getup is impeccable: A crisp white cuff peeks from beneath the fur, and she sports an enormous ring with a squarish aqua gem that covers the breadth of two fingers. Dark red lipstick limns her mouth, and auburn ringlets ringlets npltirabuzones mpl; bucles mpl

ringlets nplanglaises fpl

ringlets ring npl
 cascade down to the center of her back.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The costume and pose are in fact a nearly identical copy of Feinstein's own appearance in a Marc Jacobs ad from last season (the look of which was itself apparently borrowed from a painting by her husband, John Currin). Yet, whatever recycled accoutrements ac·cou·ter·ment or ac·cou·tre·ment  
n.
1. An accessory item of equipment or dress. Often used in the plural.

2. Military equipment other than uniforms and weapons. Often used in the plural.

3.
 of glamour the photograph depicts, above all it dwells on beauty's entropic undoing: The model's neck and cheeks are pulled by wrinkles; her nose is filled with fuzz; her earlobes are distended distended Medtalk Enlarged, bloated. Cf Nondistended. ; and, most arresting, her teeth are a snarling snarl 1  
v. snarled, snarl·ing, snarls

v.intr.
1. To growl viciously while baring the teeth.

2. To speak angrily or threateningly.

v.tr.
, rotting mess, pointing in all directions and varnished brown by the passage of thousands of cups of coffee and drags of tobacco.

Indeed, the elderly model was handpicked, it appears, due to her uncanny anticipation of how Feinstein might (but likely won't, if high-price dentistry has anything to contribute) evolve physically over the next few decades. For this exhibition, Feinstein's findings of herself in much older women were recorded, Dorian Gray-like, in a number of unremarkable pastel drawings on paper as well as in garish enamel paintings on mirrors (didactic, even pastiche pastiche (păstēsh`, pä–), work of art that combines themes and styles from various sources in such a way as to appear obviously derivative. , materializations of Oscar Wilde's much more perverse metaphorical equation of painting and mirror). Corseted, wigged, and bejeweled be·jew·eled or be·jew·elled  
adj.
Decorated with or as if with jewels.
, and sporting a parasol, a teacup, and a fawn, respectively, Rhoda, Ruth, and Marie, (all works 2005) are offered as variations on a stereotypical, slightly worn eighteenth-century aristocrat. Rendered in this intentionally overwrought o·ver·wrought  
adj.
1. Excessively nervous or excited; agitated.

2. Extremely elaborate or ornate; overdone: overwrought prose style.
, anachronistic style, Feinstein's (self-)portraits feel, nonetheless, (self-)consciously contemporary, in line with the current vogue for noble iconography. Not reflecting on gendered art history or ageist social mores, the unabashedly solipsistic images are visual speculations in which the artist fancies time's passage as yet another accessory.

Feinstein has previously taken up the Rococo, the Baroque, and the decorative in her sculpture. While not overtly concerned with deconstruction (she has repeatedly described her work as "happy, shiny things"), it has nonetheless exposed (but also relied on) the ways in which flourish has been historically coded as feminine. Yet the four sculptures exhibited this time around were merely clunky hybrids of kitschy Cubism cubism, art movement, primarily in painting, originating in Paris c.1907. Cubist Theory


Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras.
 and craft. Three cutout cut·out  
n.
1. Something cut out or intended to be cut out from something else.

2. Electricity A device that interrupts, bypasses, or disconnects a circuit or circuit element.

3.
 wood works, Good Times, Bad Times, and Old Times, parceled life into trimesters, while the fourth, a goopy white foam affair called Master HL, stood in a curved niche that penetrated one wall such that its pseudoclassical ass was visible to anyone entering the "rear" space of the gallery.

Feinstein potentially addresses a number of complicated and compelling issues including gender, beauty, stereotyping, aging, and class. (Cindy Sherman's spectacular photographs of herself done up as a variety of East Coast and West Coast "types" from a few years ago are a useful comparison.) Yet, in this exhibition, it seems that Feinstein is unwilling to admit the anxiety that attends her project. While the works might arguably operate as symbolic talismans against getting older or fantasies of doing so "gracefully," they are first-and-foremost celebratory caricatures, self-indulgent and vain (it is as if Feinstein feels able to show us what she might become strictly because she hasn't yet). Only the announcement's photograph--which, after all, exposes the sitter much more than the artist she ostensibly resembles--offers a believable hint of why Dorian Gray secreted his portrait in the attic In the Attic can refer to:
  • In The Attic (webcast)
  • In the Attic (band)
.
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Article Details
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Author:Burton, Johanna
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:635
Previous Article:David Shrigley: Anton Kern Gallery.
Next Article:Eric Fischl: Mary Boone Gallery.
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