DAVID
ASKEVOLD: NEW PICTURES AND OLDER VIDEOS
3
February through 7 April 2001
The photographs David
Askevold developed for his exhibition at Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions are based on images taken by the artist throughout Nova
Scotia, Iceland, and Germany, and expand his continuing investigation
of landscape. The foundation of each image is natural phenomena
-- harbor floors, waterfront cliffs, etc. -- onto which are applied
references to a range of cultural phenomena including rock and roll
album covers, hieroglyphic Native American drawing, and comic book
characters. As part of his process, Askevold kept an on-going bank
of images he considers "cultural artifacts", from popular
sources, such as logos and comic books, as well as historical art
and architecture references. Askevold then digitally built these
icons into his landscapes, where they can be found imbedded in rock
like fossils or piled on top of each other like cultural silt which
has drifted to the bottom of the Halifax harbor floor, (example
"Pilescape", 2000). The interest in the end result lies
within the placement of images next to each other within each composition,
and the cross coding of signs that come about through a highly selective
and articulated editing process.
Throughout his career
David Askevold's artistic and conceptual interests have included
the environment and the relationship between nature and society.
His work examines and portrays strategies used by people both to
inhabit and alter their environments to suit their needs. Less an
environmentalist than an anthropologist, Askevold is interested
in society's invention and cultivation of resources and the manipulation
and use of them to create and exercise power. "By heightening awareness
of the acculturation of nature and the complicity of cultural production
within the colonization and commodification of the natural environment,
'landscape' is affirmed...not as a scenic entity, but as a textual
construction that is subject to change over time." (from "Cultural
Geographies and Selected Works").
The selection of video
tapes included in the exhibition span twenty-four years of production,
from 1970 to 1994. The earlier videos demonstrate Askevolds
nascent interest in performance-based process work as well as his
fascination with allusion and implied narrative, interests he has
continued to cultivate throughout his exploration of the medium.
In an important early work entitled "Fill" (1970), Askevold uses
two simple props -- a microphone and sheets of aluminum foil --
to conduct a documented sound performance. Beginning with just the
microphone, the artist simply and systematically, wraps the mic
with sheets of foil. The sound, at first loud and static-ridden,
becomes muffled as more and more sheets are applied. After a period
of performing, the screen is filled with the image of crumpled foil,
at which point the artist reverses his process. In "Rhea" (1982),
Askevold elaborates on his interest in allusion and implication,
using images that seem to be fragments of a larger narrative to
suggest, rather than tell, a story. The piece consists of a series
of close-up shots of numerous people, each stating a name or a small
phrase. The shots themselves seem familiar and gesture towards the
type of staged reaction shot, often used in soap operas or made-for-TV
movies, that momentarily interrupts the linearity of the story.
When edited together, the sequence of images sets up and then confounds
conventional narrative expectations.
David Askevold is an
early conceptualist with roots in this city, but has not shown or
lived in Los Angeles for nearly 20 years, and has not done a solo
exhibition outside of Canada since 1991 where he exhibited with
PS1s Clocktower Gallery in New York. His project with Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions was a special opportunity for us
to present Askevolds explorations while in Canada, and introduce
them to Los Angeles audiences, while reintroducing an artist who
has had a significant impact on the Los Angeles art community. Through
his artwork and his teaching here in the late 70s and early
80s, Askevold has influenced -- directly or indirectly --
numerous emerging and established Los Angeles-based artists.
As a teacher at Nova
Scotia College of Art and Design in the 1970s, David Askevold
developed and led what he called the Projects Class. In what was
identified as "the most innovative and interesting aspect of the
NSCAD curriculum of the period," (Gil McElroy, ARTSatlantic,
Spring/Summer 1996) Askevold selected artists, including Lawrence
Weiner, Robert Smithson, Lucy Lippard, Joseph Kosuth, and Mel Bochner,
and invited them to submit projects that he and his students would
then carry out. His artwork, often manifested on videotape, is usually
the result of a non-strategy based on favorable happenstance, collaboration,
and selected circumstance. This method evokes those used by many
younger artists today, such as Dave Muller and Rirkrit Tiravanija,
who invite the unscripted, unchoreographed participation of others
as a necessary part of their artistic practice.
In the late '70s and
early '80s he taught at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena,
CalArts in Valencia, and UC/Irvine. Askevold showed at Los Angeles
Contemporary Exhibitions in 1983 in a group show entitled "Head
Hunters." He had solo shows at the Thomas Lewallen Gallery in Los
Angeles in 1978 and a survey entitled "Selected Works 1972-1976"
at UC/Irvine in 1976. His group shows in the area include "Reconsidering
the Art Object 1965-1975" at MOCA (1995) and "Michael Asher, Richard
Long, and David Askevold" at Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary
Art (1977).