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Victor Burgin: Christine Burgin Gallery.


In Design and Crime (and Other Diatribes) (2002), Hal Foster This article is about the comic strip artist. For the art critic and Princeton professor, see Hal Foster (art critic).
Harold ("Hal") Rudolf Foster (August 18, 1892 in Halifax, Nova Scotia – July 25, 1982) was a Canadian-American cartoonist most famous
 argues that design has taken over every aspect of industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 society. Yet Victor Burgin's recent video, The Little House, 2005, points out that even in earlier eras design was linked to everything from natural urges and social constructs to sexual desire to the creation of narrative.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

At Christine Burgin Gallery, a large box functioned as a small theater for viewing Burgin's work, which is based on a panning shot of the interior and garden of a 1922 Rudolph Schindler This article is about the doctor Rudolph Schindler. For the architect, see Rudolf Schindler.

Rudolph Schindler (1888-1968) was a German doctor widely regarded as the "father of [the field of] gastroscopy.
 house in Los Angeles. The images are accompanied by narration excerpted from a text by eighteenth-century writer Jean-Francois de Bastide Bastides are fortified[1] new towns built in medieval Languedoc, Gascony and Aquitaine during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, although some authorities count Mont-de-Marsan and Montauban, which was founded in 1144,[2] as the first bastides.  (a recent translation of which was published as The Little House: An Architectural Seduction in 1996). Bastide's La Petite Maison, which was conceived in collaboration with "architectural educator" Jacques-Francois Blondel, combines the form of the erotic novella novella: see novel.
novella

Story with a compact and pointed plot, often realistic and satiric in tone. Originating in Italy during the Middle Ages, it was often based on local events; individual tales often were gathered into collections.
 with that of an architectural treatise to create a titillating tit·il·late  
v. tit·il·lat·ed, tit·il·lat·ing, tit·il·lates

v.tr.
1. To stimulate by touching lightly; tickle.

2. To excite (another) pleasurably, superficially or erotically.
 but educational brochure for prospective homeowners. In the story, the wealthy, conniving Marquis de Tremicour makes a wager with the bookish book·ish  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or resembling a book.

2. Fond of books; studious.

3. Relying chiefly on book learning:
 Melite that she will succumb to him after seeing his petite maison, an architectural form that everyone else in Paris, save Melite, knows is actually a large, opulent house "contrived for love"--more precisely, clandestine sexual encounters.

Burgin's work leads naturally back to Bastide's text, a fascinating document that draws comparisons to Choderlos de Laclos's Les Liaisons dangereuses (1782) and de Sade's La Philosophie dans le boudoir (1795), as well as Roland Barthes's lesson on the techniques of narrative seduction in S/Z (1970). The maison is the stage for seduction, although the supposedly uncontrived style of the design is repeatedly emphasized in exteriors that, according to Bastide, "owed more to nature than to art." Bastide's descriptions are the textual equivalent of an effective photo spread, detailing Rococo interiors full of painted panels and opulent fabrics, a dining room with a mechanical table, and a bathroom with exciting technological innovations such as a flushing toilet. Language and seduction go hand in hand; descriptions of the house are like a striptease in which the body is revealed in strategic increments. Names of eminent artists and craftsman (Francois Boucher, Nicolas Pineau, Jean-Baptiste Pierre, Francoise Gilot, Pierre-Bertrand Dandrillon) are sprinkled throughout the text, and every time Tremicour moves in on Melite, a description of yet another design confection con·fec·tion
n.
A sweetened medicinal compound. Also called electuary.
 interferes.

Juxtaposing descriptions of lush eighteenth-century interiors with images of Schindler's stark, empty interiors and gardens, Burgin highlights Anthony Vidler's claims in the preface to La Petite Maison's recent translation that there was "little room for the secret and arousing chambers of desire in the cool and transparent environments of modernism." But Burgin adds a third element in the form of a beautiful young Asian woman who appears occasionally, reading silently from a little red book. This reference to Mao functions, perhaps, as a Fosterian critique of design's potential for mass social seduction.

The power of design, for both Bastide and Burgin, resides in its apparent democracy and globalism glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
. Anyone with money might be educated into the haute consuming classes, just as the garden in Schindler's California house looks as if it could be anywhere, the south of France South of France south n the South of France → le Sud de la France, le Midi  or LA. But what in Burgin's hands could have prompted a sterile academic exercise has, instead, happily resulted in a richly detailed and highly stimulating journey through history and materialism, the point of which is that Melite is far from design's only victim; as a culture, we've long since been collectively seduced.
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Title Annotation:New York; The Little House, 2005; video art
Author:Schwendener, Martha
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Sep 1, 2005
Words:585
Previous Article:Sarah Sze: Marianne Boesky Gallery.
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