Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,508,224 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler: Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria.


For costuming, see Matthew Barney; for sound, Janet Cardiff Janet Cardiff (born 1957) is a Canadian installation artist. Born in Brussels, Ontario Cardiff studied at Queen's University (BFA) and the University of Alberta (MVA). She works in collaboration with her partner George Bures Miller. ; for art direction, Gregory Crewdson Gregory Crewdson (born September 26 1962) is an American photographer who is best known for elaborately staged, surreal scenes of American homes and neighborhoods.

Crewdson was born in Park Slope, a neighborhood in Brooklyn.
. Over the past ten years the art world has witnessed the incremental reinvention of the cinematic wheel, one department at a time, via the movie-besotted mediums of contemporary photography and video. Working together, using their accumulated knowledge of the film industry's bounces, booms, and production schedules, the aforementioned trio could probably pull off a respectable feature. With Single Wide, 2002, a Mobius-like six-minute, ten-second meditation on memory and narrative, Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler lay claim to the job of camera operator, pioneering a moving version of staged photography through their singular, adamant use of the dolly.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In one, long, circular tracking shot (with a small digression), Single Wide explores the nighttime terrain of a single-wide trailer home and its outlying parking lot. The camera glides horizontally through a child's bedroom propped out with dollhouse and stuffed animals, a bathroom with a leaky leak·y  
adj. leak·i·er, leak·i·est
Permitting leaks or leakage: a leaky roof; a leaky defense system.

Adj. 1.
 faucet, a living room, a kitchen, and an adult's bedroom, then outside to the dirt yard where a Ford truck stands bathed in the electric blue backlighting back·light  
n.
A type of spotlight, used in photography, that illuminates a subject from behind.

tr.v. back·light·ed or back·lit , back·light·ing, back·lights
 typical of '80s Hollywood. Along the way, the viewer glimpses the main protagonist, a woman in a flannel shirt with a bleeding gash on her head, as she looks at herself in a mirror, walks to the truck carrying a bag with a stuffed animal, weeps, and drives the truck into the kitchen of the mobile home. The spectacular centerpiece of this cool journey is the ruined kitchen through which the camera occasionally passes. Here, in a composition indebted to Jeff Wall's The Destroyed Room, 1978, the steaming hood of the truck anchors a scene of chaos, including smashed appliances and artfully crushed Venetian blinds.

In this and their previous color video projections, Hubbard and Birchler's primary subject is the construction of narrative itself. Scrupulously scru·pu·lous  
adj.
1. Conscientious and exact; painstaking. See Synonyms at meticulous.

2. Having scruples; principled.
 foregoing conventional epiphany Epiphany (ĭpĭf`ənē) [Gr.,=showing], a prime Christian feast, celebrated Jan. 6, called also Twelfth Day or Little Christmas. Its eve is Twelfth Night.  or denouement de·noue·ment also dé·noue·ment  
n.
1.
a. The final resolution or clarification of a dramatic or narrative plot.

b.
, the artists instead build convincing atmospheres out of elliptical el·lip·tic   or el·lip·ti·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or having the shape of an ellipse.

2. Containing or characterized by ellipsis.

3.
a.
 repetitions and dramatic moments that appear eternally stalled in a state of pregnant incompletion. The results of these structuralist story telling techniques are somewhat mixed. After numerous revolutions of Single Wide's perpetual loop, for instance, the sets do begin to hum with uncanny supplemental meanings--one wonders about those posters on the wall or the perfectly placed smudges on the mirror. Ideally one is led to wonder about the fundamental "constructedness" of narrative, identity, and reality itself. The trade-off, however, comes in the artists' treatment of their main character. While this woman has obviously experienced some terrible trauma regarding her child, any other detail about her state of mind is frustratingly missing. By avoiding the recherche re·cher·ché  
adj.
1. Uncommon; rare.

2. Exquisite; choice.

3. Overrefined; forced.

4. Pretentious; overblown.
 narrative devices of closure and first-person identification, Hubbard and Birchler also forgo the opportunity to establish a compelling emotional logic for their dramatic situation.

Still, Single Wide works better than much gallery-based deconstruction of cinematic coding, a genre in which bad acting is often justified as Warholian affectlessness and poor plotting passes for metafictional ambiguity. Along the sometimes hazy line between ambitious artmaking and lazy filmmaking, Hubbard and Birchler fall finally on the side of ambition, crafting elaborate images and temporal structures that allude to allude to
verb refer to, suggest, mention, speak of, imply, intimate, hint at, remark on, insinuate, touch upon see see, elude
 everyone from Hitchcock to Robbe-Grillet to Spielberg. Perhaps one day they will also decide to take on that most challenging element of the narrative apparatus--character.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:NEW YORK
Author:Raymond, Jonathan
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:550
Previous Article:"Curious Crystals of Unusual Purity": P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center.(NEW YORK)
Next Article:Karel Funk: 303 Gallery.(NEW YORK)
Topics:



Related Articles
Nan Goldin. (article on photographer Nan Goldin)
TERESA HUBBARD AND ALEXANDER BIRCHLER.(Bob Van Orsouw Gallery)(Brief Article)
Rooms with a Skew.
The kid is alright: 25-year-old art star Ryan McGinley went from skate punk to photographer, but his worldview remains the same. (art).(Interview)
"Diane Arbus: Revelations".(Preview Fall 2003)(San Francisco Museum of Modern Art)(photography retrospective)
"The American Effect": Whitney Museum of American Art.(New York)(Critical Essay)
Ed Ruscha grand tourist.
Art apart: set your mind free with images that are beautiful, challenging, and gay.(art listings)(Brief Article)
Cielo: the art of good living.(Residential: marketing & brokerage)(Brief Article)
Tim Hawkinson.(Brief Article)(Book Review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles