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VIRGIL MARTI.


PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, established in 1805, incorporated in 1806. It is supported by private endowment. The academy grew out of a proposal by Charles Willson Peale for an art institution; this led to the founding of the Columbianum,  

Even in this nineteenth-century museum/ school, architecturally idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 by any standard, the first arch-framed glimpse of Virgil Marti's installation caused a visceral jolt that only intensified as one approached. Marti had transformed the exhibition space with fluorescent wallpaper of his own design, which glowed in the gallery under black light. The fill, as the main panels are called, repeated a large composite image of a range of landscape icons, from palm trees to Rocky Mountain waterfalls; the scene announced the kind of botanical anomalies Marti finds in the recollected landscapes of Frederic Church as well as the geographical peculiarities in some panoramas of nineteenth-century "scenics." But Marti's take on transporting wallpaper also evoked the psychedelic vernacular of the '60s and '70s and awakened the viewer's sense of nostalgia. A deep black flocking added a kitschy brilliance to the surrounding colors and suggested the illusion of space, pulling the viewer in.

Charged by its august location as well as by the cultural and biographical signs that often mark Marti's projects (Bully Wallpaper, 1992, presented bullies from the artist's high-school yearbook; For Oscar Wilde, included wallpaper inspired by Arts and Crafts arts and crafts, term for that general field of applied design in which hand fabrication is dominant. The term was coined in England in the late 19th cent. as a label for the then-current movement directed toward the revivifying of the decorative arts.  designs of sunflowers and lilies), the installation also offered another, analytical posture: The pulsating cascade recalled Marcel Duchamp's watery tribute to artifice ar·ti·fice  
n.
1. An artful or crafty expedient; a stratagem. See Synonyms at wile.

2. Subtle but base deception; trickery.

3. Cleverness or skill; ingenuity.
 in the Etant Donnes, housed in the nearby Philadelphia Museum of Art Philadelphia Museum of Art, established in 1875, chartered in 1876. When the city of Philadelphia planned to erect a building to house the Centennial Exposition of 1876, provision was made to keep the building permanently occupied; the Pennsylvania Museum and School . But the bulk of the correspondence took place between Marti and the eclectic extravagance of the 1876 Frank Furness Frank Heyling Furness (November 12, 1839 - June 27, 1912) was a noted American architect. He was also a Medal of Honor recipient for his bravery during the American Civil War. Biography
Furness was born in Philadelphia on November 12, 1839.
 and George Hewitt building housing the gallery. As the Furness and Hewitt partnership practiced a Victorian version of appropriation, incorporating a range of styles and periods into their designs (the Academy's facade combines Gothic arched windows, French academy-inspired reliefs of artists and architects of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and elaborately patterned Philadelphia brickwork--all topped wit h a mansard roof mansard roof (măn`särd), type of roof, so named because it was frequently used by the French architect François Mansart. It was not devised by him but was used early in the 16th cent. ), it's fitting that Marti, with his contemporary impulse to appropriate, would borrow from them. To separate the central landscape images from a brilliantly seductive flame dado below (abstracted from the detail of another Furness building), Marti reinterpreted a mushroom motif from the museum's foyer, layering his version with a subtle pattern of hallucinogenic hal·lu·ci·no·gen  
n.
A substance that induces hallucination.



[hallucin(ation) + -gen.]


hal·lu
 glow and adding to the range of readings the installation encouraged. Completing the conventional division of the spheres, the artist provided a heavenly touch with a tightly patterned starry sky, an effective geometric restatement of the more randomly painted stars on the ceiling above the museum's grand stairwell stair·well  
n.
A vertical shaft around which a staircase has been built.


stairwell
Noun

a vertical shaft in a building that contains a staircase

Noun 1.
. However playful this installation's riff on nineteenth-century decorative impulses may have been, the depth of Marti's involvement revealed a sense of real homage.

Partially in response to "not wanting to be the wallpaper guy" (this is Marti's seventh such project), he fashioned The Pathetic Fallacy pathetic fallacy
n.
The attribution of human emotions or characteristics to inanimate objects or to nature; for example, angry clouds; a cruel wind.
, 2001, a hard-edged but biomorphic sculpture for the gallery floor. Among the details of this gradated, red form were artificial cacti, a couple of driftwood legs, and a little cartoon figurine mostly embedded in the surface. Small electric lights in the piece failed to illuminate the somewhat obscure configuration. It didn't hold a candle to the complex world the wallpapered spectacle of light described.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Author:Neff, Eileen
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2001
Words:518
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