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HEIDI
2: THE UNAUTHORIZED SEQUEL
Saturday
14 October through Saturday 23 December 2000
Collaborative artists
SUE DE BEER and LAURA PARNES offered their 2-channel video portraying
the coming of age of Heidi, a character introduced by Los Angeles-based
artists Paul McCarthy and Mike Kelley in a video installation of
the same name. The videos are part of a larger installation environment
featuring sob-provoking Christmas trees, Nerf furniture, and life-size
action figures. No confusion -- this is not a spoof, parody or homage:
this is a sequel. And like all truly inspired sequels Heidi 2
is more shocking, more glamorous and bloodier than the original!
Part abject epistemology,
part pop saturation, Heidi 2 is a multimedia collaboration
between De Beer and Parnes in which the disciplines of performance,
sculpture, and video coalesce amid primal gore. Heidi 2 is
a macabre comedy in which birth, family, sex and gender roles are
deformed and filtered through popular culture and narrative tropes.
A place where transgression and telecommunication are one, Heidi
2 picks up one generation ahead of where the original video
left off. Heidi, performed by Parnes, is now a mother whose persona
is defined by her relation to her daughter Heidi 2, performed by
De Beer. In contrast to the McCarthy/Kelly original, however, the
locus of power in Heidi 2 is reassigned. By revoking Grandfathers
tyrannical status, De Beer and Parnes empower Heidi as the head
of the household and cast her character somewhere between feminist
discourse and the horror-film genre.
The installation plays
off of and manipulates the three existing accounts of the Heidi
story: the Johanna Spyri 1880 original; the 1950s Disney film adaptation;
and its subsequent interpretation by McCarthy and Kelly. The resulting
hybrid by De Beer and Parnes is a bent combination of pop and pain.
The artists confront the viewer with an environment that is both
stage and set, populated by sob-provoking Christmas trees, Nerf
furniture, life-size action figures, and paper masks of teen idol
Leonardo Di Caprio. Amid the confusion of kitsch viewers must decide
if they want merely to observe or engage complicitly in the activity.
Contemporary art has
put itself in the philosophical position of re-writing, re-presenting,
and re-reading all areas of culture. We loosely refer to these doings
as a postmodern condition. But what happens when it exacts that
tradition upon itself? Paul McCarthy and Mike Kelly co-opted the
Heidi story, sanitized and sanctified once already by Disney, to
up-end notions of mans aspirations to idyllic perfection.
Their version utilized the original characters -- Heidi, Grandpa,
and Peter -- and cast them in a grotesque type of [im]morality play
that took up the ongoing exploration of the conflict and, often
hypocritical schism, between nature and culture.
In Heidi 2 De
Beer and Parnes suggest a dissolution of this question. The true
discomfort and squeamishness in the sequel rests not in the "cheap
theatrics" of fake blood and Hitchcockian score, but in the
lack of anxiety with which these acts are presented. Both De Beer
and Parnes, a generation removed from McCarthy and Kelley, have
the benefit and baggage of an audience aware of Freudian Revisionism
and Jerry Springer. In one vignette, we see Heidi offering bulimia
lessons to Heidi 2 with the continued criticism, "No. Thats
too subconscious." De Beers and Parnes psychoanalytic
gesture looks at the mother-daughter relationship not as a mapping
over of the Oedipal conflict, but as a unique situation affected
by issues more poignant than subconscious desire -- by the hyper-consciousness
of self-identity through media.
In another vignette,
we see Heidi 2 trippily levitate towards the horizon. Below her
we see herself reflected as her mother, Heidi, in the negligee she
was last seen wearing with Peter/Di Caprio, the lust of Heidi 2s
life, who may, or may not, be Heidi 2s father. (Or was it
Heidi 2 last seen with Peter?) This segment, entitled "Dissociation",
could be read to have a multiple meanings -- Heidi 2 separating
her self-image from that of her mother, the previous generation;
Heidi 2 detaching herself from her role as a child who "loves
mom," and identifying herself as a sexual being who will bear
the next generation; and/or Heidi 2 cultivating a dis-social, and
un-natural, entirely mediated relationship with world around her.
The final image of Heidi 2 "bearing" herself via broadcast
"in vitro" brings the viewer to the end of the nature-culture
debate -- Media has triumphed, at least in this version. But, theres
always room for Heidi 3: The Unauthorized Sitcom.
Sue De Beer has received
the Franklin Furnace Fund for Performance Art and the Joan Sovern
Award for Excellence in Sculpture, both in 1998. A New York state
native whose education includes a B.F.A. from Parsons School of
Design and an M.F.A. from Columbia University, De Beer has been
exhibiting and performing since 1995. Her work is also part of the
Brooklyn Museums collection of Photographs, Drawings, and
Works on Paper. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Laura Parnes is a multimedia
artist who lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. The recipient
of several residencies, most recently with the Wexner Center in
Columbus, Ohio, Parnes has produced some twelve-videos since 1992
as a writer/director and her works have been exhibited and screened
most prominently in New York, including in the 1997 Whitney Biennial,
though also in Canada, South Africa and Britain.

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