The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art. (Reviews)."FAMILY" Families are the stuff of great stories, both fictional and real, from Lear and the Sopranos to the Hapsburgs and Kennedys. We are all experts on the subject, whether our expertise lies in trying to escape family--with its dynamics of guilt, manipulation, and other dysfunctions--or working to create or re-create one. Group shows are yet another kind of familial collective, and the Aldrich Museum (a former house, appropriately enough) took on this unwieldy matter in "Family," bringing together a clan of thirty-seven artists who have made works that consider the institution in its many mutable mu·ta·ble adj. 1. a. Capable of or subject to change or alteration. b. Prone to frequent change; inconstant: mutable weather patterns. 2. forms: tribal, professional, religious, racial, alternative, and old-fashioned nuclear. Offspring was a preoccupation in the exhibition. Tapping reproductive anxieties (and pushing the envelope of good taste) was Chrissy Caviar, 2001-2002. For this Bad Girl art in the age of in vitro in vitro /in vi·tro/ (in ve´tro) [L.] within a glass; observable in a test tube; in an artificial environment. in vi·tro adj. In an artificial environment outside a living organism. piece, artist Chrissy Conant harvested twelve of her eggs and sealed them in small vials. The containers were then packaged into jars with labels announcing their weight and ingredients alongside an image of the artist in sexy attire. Presented as a delicacy available in limited quantity for consumption only by those who can afford it, the piece jabbed at both the egg-selling racket and the art market. Similarly provocative, video artist Maria Marshall, who often uses her children as subjects (a much discussed 1999 digitally manipulated image by the artist shows her two-year-old son taking a drag from a cigarette), opened afresh a·fresh adv. Once more; anew; again: start afresh. afresh Adverb once more Adv. 1. the old Sally Mann Sally Mann (born May 1, 1951) is an American photographer. Mann was born in Lexington, Virginia in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. She attended The Putney School, Bennington College and Friends World College, and earned a B.A. debate about objectifying young bodies and emotions. President Bill Clinton, Memphis, Tennessee For the ancient Egyptian capital, see . Memphis is a city in the southwest corner of Tennessee, and the county seat of Shelby County. Memphis rises above the Mississippi River on the 4th Chickasaw Bluff just below the mouth of the Wolf River. , November 13, 1993, 2000, depicts one of Marshall's boys reading a speech b y the former president espousing loving parental structures. His too-young voice highlights the artificiality of the words. Maternal power seemed to dominate, as milk, the uber-domestic beverage, flowed liberally. For example, Nan Goldin's tableau tab·leau n. pl. tab·leaux or tab·leaus 1. A vivid or graphic description: The movie was a tableau of a soldier's life. 2. of twenty-four photographs portraying women before and after pregnancy was replete re·plete adj. 1. Abundantly supplied; abounding: a stream replete with trout; an apartment replete with Empire furniture. 2. Filled to satiation; gorged. 3. with swollen breasts and nursing babies. The perils that beset be·set tr.v. be·set, be·set·ting, be·sets 1. To attack from all sides. 2. To trouble persistently; harass. See Synonyms at attack. 3. families of two, on the other hand, were painfully laid bare in Sophie Calle's Autobiographies (The Rival), 1992, which includes the text of a love letter Calle discovered her husband had written to another woman. In a wrenching, ineffectual way of reclaiming her husband and excising his lover, Calle edited out the woman's initial, replacing it with her own. With so subjective a theme, "Family" was understandably broad, but even so a few selections were stretches. Among them, Nicole Eisenman's Hunting, 2000, depicted a "tribe" of women in snow gear sneaking up on two men whose helicopter has crashed in frozen arctic territory--providing, the wall text proposes, an example of an "alternative family structure." Works driven by personal narratives were better, including a new piece by Sanford Biggers in which Super-8 home movies of the artist's family at birthday parties, meals, and other gatherings were projected inside a small barnlike shed. Installed high in a tree in the museum's sculpture lawn and decorated on one side with glass bottles, the sculpture evoked southern vernacular traditions while nodding to the African tradition of creating altars in caves or trees in memory of the dead. Called Racine de Memoire (Root of memory), Biggers's piece seemed the perfect metaphor: The family may turn your world upside down or be a safe haven 1. Designated area(s) to which noncombatants of the United States Government's responsibility and commercial vehicles and materiel may be evacuated during a domestic or other valid emergency. 2. of unconditional acceptance , but it is always an almost palpable Easily perceptible, plain, obvious, readily visible, noticeable, patent, distinct, manifest. The term palpable usually refers to some type of egregious wrong, such as a governmental error or abuse of power. receptacle for memory and self. |
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