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A rather ramshackle aesthetic: Arthouse's Rapture in Rupture
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by Ivan Lozano   
December 2008
Curator and recent mom Elizabeth Dunbar, in a catalog essay, describes Arthouse at the Jones Center's Rapture in Rupture better than I ever could:
"...we appear to be witnessing a resurgent strain of art making defined by a rather ramshackle aesthetic along with a deliberate, even defiant openness and resistance to easily digestible meaning. (...) These works relate to each other in their resistance against formal or material purity as well as an economy of means; instead, they are substantial, messy, and abundant, bursting with detail and meaning, and sometimes bordering on the obsessive."
 
auren Kelley Wild Seed, 2008 stop-motion animation and digital video with sound Run time: 1:28

I didn't love this show. In fact I think I only liked one piece in it: Lauren Kelley's elegant and cinematic allegory of dominance, Wild Seed. In this short video an animal topiary is doused with (primordial?) ooze that levels the proud animals. While a male voice (that sounds a lot like Serge Gainsbourg) complains about the weather being cold and drab, the giraffe topiary tells a melancholy story (through subtitles) of losing one's place as the tallest one and reminiscing about the good times. It's a big step forward for Kelley, proving she's no one-trick pony. Can you tell I'm developing a huge art crush on her?
 
Shiri Mordechay, Untitled, 2007, mixed media on paper, 80x172x8 inches
 
My dislike with the rest of the show was terribly personal: I have an aesthetic aversion to messy art and lack of clear composition. Shiri Mordechay's sprawling figures vying for attention, the penises poking out, hair and string and hanging people were almost unbearable to me. The muddy colors didn't help at all. It was like half-chewed food: bits and pieces all over, surrounded by browns and yellows. Nicolau Vergueiro's patchworks were just as unpleasant to me. I didn't undertand how the motley bits and pieces were supposed to relate to each other or how the titles fit in. Like Mordechay's sprawl, Vergueiro's "bargain-bin baroqueness" seemed equally undigested/undigestible. Mindy Shapero's work was a little nicer to look at, especially the sculptures. However, it left me with a weird Dargeresque preciousness that I found hard to take.

Check out a podcast of Kelley and Mordechay speaking about their work on Arthouse's blog .
 
 
UPDATE: Read a review of the show by The Statesma's Jeanne Claire van Ryzin via XL HERE.
Add Comment add feed
Messy
written by Asshole on December 16, 2008, 9:52 am

Man Lazano you sold me on this show, where do I sign up?

what do i get from reading this
written by pfffffffft on December 18, 2008, 10:26 pm

all you really say is that you don't like it. you don't even really discuss the art. everything you write is like that.

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Last Updated ( December 2008 )
 
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