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Untitled (polyurethane objects and real objects).


The Swiss artists Peter Fischli and David Weiss There are several individuals of note named David Weiss, including:
  • David Weiss (novelist), author of The Guilt Makers, The Spirit and the Flesh, Naked Came I, and other works
  • David S.
 are putterers who make things they needn't make; items that are usually useful achieve futility in their hands. They are a miniguild, producing an art that goes undercover, that slips by, momentarily undetected in a scan of one's surroundings. In the summer of 1992, for example, in Schorndorf, south Germany, they took over a pre-fabricated one-car garage behind an Imbiss Bude (snack shack) in an expanse of farmland. Through a small window one could spy the props of a nondescript non·de·script  
adj.
Lacking distinctive qualities; having no individual character or form: "This expression gave temporary meaning to a set of features otherwise nondescript" 
 existence--a worktable, modest cooking facilities, dog food, a comfortable chair; somebody's whole world packed into a gray concrete box. There was no sign, no explanation, and only after a long pause did one realize that everything was patiently handmade--a laborious homage to the blindingly familiar. The occupant of this outbuilding outbuilding n. a structure not connected with the primary residence on a parcel of property. This may include a shed, garage, barn, cabana, pool house, or cottage.  in a pasture was surely a handyman and a recluse, made heroic only by the artist's touch--by the preservation (re-creation) of his affects as future artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
. This project for Artforum is a tableau similar to the Schorndorf installation, but it also evokes a familiar art genre, "the artist's studio." Two products and a crumpled crum·ple  
v. crum·pled, crum·pling, crum·ples

v.tr.
1. To crush together or press into wrinkles; rumple.

2. To cause to collapse.

v.intr.
1.
 backdrop suggest the practice of (fine) artmaking. The rest could be any artisan's. There must be two bodies somewhere beyond the table, one who drinks Diet, the other Classic Coke.

Some things here are real, others handmade. Here is another day curated upon a tabletop, a still life of the objects one might use to create a still life. It is a full day. Milk, iced tea, beer: they forgot to eat. A banana may or may not turn color, turn soft. Something is playing in the background--maybe it's Wagner--but the batteries are running low and strains of Die Feen wane sluggishly. The phone hasn't rung in days, patrons have ceased to call. In fact the phone isn't even connected. You could clean but you just don't have the time. You're a bit of a cliche. You mean to clean but every day folds into the next, and basic chores seem to slip your mind.

Collier Schorr is an artist and writer who lives in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. She is the U.S. Editor for Frieze frieze, in architecture, the member of an entablature between the architrave and the cornice or any horizontal band used for decorative purposes. In the first type the Doric frieze alternates the metope and the triglyph; that of the other orders is plain or  magazine, London.
COPYRIGHT 1994 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Schorr, Collier
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 1994
Words:369
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