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Work in process: Bernard Frize.


THE INSTALLATIONS BY FISCHLI & WEISS WEISS Workshop on Industrial Experience with Systems Software  no less than the performances by Paola Pivi and Eric Duyckaerts carry out, in slapstick mode, deliberate inquiries into process. From the Gutai group's spectacular gestures to Wim Delvoye's digesting machine, the works brought together in these pages by process-oriented painter Bernard Frize sustain the notion of the artist's labor-intensive engagement with the mechanics of a work. In Mike Kelley's Free Gesture Frozen, 1998, the spontaneity of the artist's gesture is ensured a priori by the very nature of the medium--finger paint. By liberating new possibilities of play, Kelley has discovered a radical way of producing "process" as fiction, of, in Frize's words, "making materiality readable as convention." The artists convened here refuse a retreat to the unquestioned authority of art. For them, the decisions that make the work are based on a logic of contingency, wherein limits and accident are embraced as necessarily part of an art caught in motion. Some choose to demons Demons
See also devil; evil; ghosts; hell; spirits and spiritualism.

ademonist

one who denies the existence of the devil or demons.

bogyism, bogeyism

recognition of the existence of demons and goblins.
 trate a weak hold over such contingencies--or even over the viewer's apprehension of the work: Adrian Schiess, for example, whose installations' sprawl and reflective sheen thwart a focused gaze, or Ayse Erkmen, whose balloons, left to drift in the Jerusalem breeze, allow the "propensity of things"--to borrow Francois Julien's phrase--to come into play precisely in a place circumscribed circumscribed /cir·cum·scribed/ (serk´um-skribd) bounded or limited; confined to a limited space.

cir·cum·scribed
adj.
Bounded by a line; limited or confined.
 by conflict. In Untitled, 2000, Gunter Umberg flaunts the slow, deliberate labor of painting. His signature black canvases seem to absorb all light and incident into their dense matte surfaces, making them all but impossible to reproduce. Others address the dispositif--the apparatus that underwrites the "inevitability" of the outcome--with a rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
 verging on the absurd: Blinky Palermo and Ellsworth Kelly (in his Paris years) both foreground an element of serendipity serendipity

happy finding of an unexpected object or solution while searching for something else.
, even randomness, inherent in the artwork's genesis (a simple window casement or the shadow of a grid cues a composition). We find this figure of the ineluctable, too, in the "theater of machines" of mannerist man·ner·ism  
n.
1. A distinctive behavioral trait; an idiosyncrasy.

2. Exaggerated or affected style or habit, as in dress or speech. See Synonyms at affectation.

3.
 architect Georg Andreas Bockler, who, in his Theatrum machinarum novum (1661), presents a hypertrophied hy·per·tro·phy  
n. pl. hy·per·tro·phies
A nontumorous enlargement of an organ or a tissue as a result of an increase in the size rather than the number of constituent cells: muscle hypertrophy.
 system of gears so elaborate that the page achieves graphic saturation. A theatricalization of causalities: The image promises a certain knowledge of the workings behind the effects and, thus, of their purpose. And yet, what is made visible is trivial--little more than common geometries and rudimentary mechanics. The machinery's applications are just as absurd: hydraulic roasting spits, mechanical bouquets of flowers. As soon as one pretends to the inexorable by plucking the incident from the chain of contingencies, the inherently fictional nature of the causal links reveals itself, as does the ridiculousness of the ends. From this gap between the often delirious complexity of the machinery--of means and process (painterly paint·er·ly  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic.

2.
a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting.

b.
 or otherwise)--and the mundane results, the viewer draws the bounty of multiple fictions, a comical, inexhaustible wellspring well·spring  
n.
1. The source of a stream or spring.

2. A source: a wellspring of ideas.


wellspring
Noun
.

Translated from French by Jeanine Herman.

Each month in this series a different artist curates an "exhibition" for Artforum's pages.

RELTED ARTICLE: SHOZO SHIMAMOTO

Bottle Painting, 1959. Performance view, Toyosaki Junior High School, Osaka, Japan.

KAZUO SHIRAGA

Untitled, 1961. Performance view, Shiraga's studio, Amagasaki, Japan.

PAOLA PIVI

Untitled, 2002. Performance view, Palais de Tokyo The Palais de Tokyo is a contemporary art museum in Paris, France. The museum is situated in the eponymous building, the "Palais de Tokyo" ( , Paris.

GEORG ANDREAS BOCKLER

Engraving from the Theatrum machinarum novum (Nuremburg, 1661).

AYSE ERKMEN

Let it Flow, 1999. Performance views, Sultan Pool, Jerusalem.

ADRIAN SCHIESS

Painting 1998. Installation view, Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria.

GUNTER UMBERG

Untitled, 2000, pigment and varnish on wood, 30 x 27 1/2".

WIM DELVOYE

Cloaca cloaca (klōā`kə), in biology, enlarged posterior end of the digestive tract of some animals. The cloaca, from the Latin word for sewer, , 2002. Installation view, New Museum of Contemporary Art This article is about New Museum of Contemporary Art. For other Museums named Museum of Contemporary Art, see Museum of Contemporary Art.

The New Museum of Contemporary Art
, New York.

BLINKY PALERMO

From To the People of New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
, 1976, 4 of 40 panels, acrylic on aluminum, dimensions variable; each panel depicted below 20 1/2 x 17".

ERIC DUYCKAERTS

How to Draw a Square, 1999, color video projection on easel display board (two views), 12 minutes.

MIKE KELLEY

Free Gesture Frozen, Yet Refusing to Submit to Personification (Orange Fingerpainting), 1998. Installation view, Jablonka Galerie, Cologne.

ELLSWORTH KEELY

Sketchbook #17,1951-52, spread from a 24-page sketchbook containing 22 drawings in ink and pencil, 5 1/4 x 17".

PETER FISCHLI & DAVID WEISS

At the limits of growth (detail), 1984-85, black-and-white photograph, 11 3/4 x 16". From the series "Stiller Nachmittag" (Quiet afternoon), 1984-85. Right: Stiller Nachmittag (Quiet afternoon), 1984-85, color photograph, 16 x 11 3/4". From the series "Stiller Nachmittag" (Quiet after-noon), 1984-85.
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Title Annotation:curated from the pages of Artforum
Author:Falguieres, Patricia
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:715
Previous Article:A thousand words.(Kutlug Ataman on his work)
Next Article:Missing in action: the art of the Atlas Group/Walid Raad.(Critical Essay)



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