LOS ANGELES, June 2002
- Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions presented "Das Spyder-Män,"
a group exhibition that ran through 24 August. Inspired by the ubiquitous
"summer blockbuster" - a phenomenon shared, promoted, and coveted
by the entertainment industry as well as the contemporary art world
- the title of this show conflated a current Hollywood offering
with one in Kassel, Germany. "Das Spyder-Män" was
the fulcrum between two summer sensations - Spider-Man, the movie,
and Documenta, the international art fair.
Organized by Irene Tsatsos,
Director / Curator of Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, "Das
Spyder-Män" was a show that considered the fantasies and
alternate realities we dream up in order to exist within and make
sense of the environments around us, in a context that loosely riffed
on the narrative conventions and tropes of the action film. The
exhibition included work in various media by Andy Alexander, Susan
Choi, Christie Frields, Violet Hopkins, Greg Kucera, Patrick Lakey,
David Miller, Alexander Morrison, Brian O'Dell, Dane Picard, and
Kim Schoenstadt.
The natural world inspires
the fantasy-filled work of both Violet Hopkins and Brian O'Dell.
Responding to examples of human intervention and mediation of nature,
Violet Hopkins, in a series of color pencil drawings called Glow,
derives her images from tourist-attraction caves as depicted on
postcards. Tamed by paving, handrails, and theatrical lighting,
the dark mysteries and hidden enclosures of caves, as tourist sites,
become less intimidating as well as less mysterious. Hopkins's drawings
help restore the deeply imaginative experience and the wonder of
the primordial architecture of caves. Believing that "we are all
active participants in the creation of our world," Brian O'Dell
has created video animations that are, among other things, a metaphors
for an origin myth. O'Dell's videos begin with still images of natural
elements such as plant stems and peapods, which are then scanned
and spliced together into hybrids. The result is a fantasy world
that is both natural and synthetic.
Christie Frields and
Andy Alexander are each represented by works that are grounded in
current social/political/cultural realities but articulate a unique
sense of the future. The title of Christie Frields sculpture, "Some
days I speculate, Other days I just accumulate," offers a set
of dichotomous inferences - natural phenomenon vs. synthetic enhancement,
consumerism vs. freedom, power vs. impotence - all composed into
a complex work that yields to an uncertain optimism. Andy Alexander's
fantastical works on paper are colorful renderings of rollercoasters
reconfigured into elaborate machines or utopian systems that are
as likely to hearken from the past as to spring from the imaginative
future. A kind of mapping of the artists psychological terrain,
this work - psychedelic, hand drawn and almost doodle-like - looks
like a technological hybrid borne of the fantasy-fulfilling landscape
of technology. An autobiographical streak ran through this exhibition.
Alexander Morrisons
series of 33 line drawings, for example, is descriptively entitled
Every house I have ever lived in drawn from memory. Falling somewhere
between fact and fiction, the drawings are as much renderings of
domestic space as ambiguous markers of time and place. Like Morrison,
David Miller turns to autobiography to give his photographs a universal
draw that radiates from a personal center. Here, the artist's photograms
appear to be visually compelling images of night skies bursting
with constellations of star clusters, but each is in fact a photographic
portrait, rendered with the wrenching material of cremated ash of
a deceased acquaintance. These images, then, combine a person's
being with ethereal notions of the universe, resulting in a gestural
and lyrical form of portraiture. In one of his two animated motion
picture contributions to this exhibition, Dane Picard has morphed
a series of photographs of himself from childhood to the present
into an eerie, mutable self-portrait. Susan Choi uses her body as
an agency for fantasies of desires and self-transformation. Choi's
photographs offer stereotypically soft-porn representations of the
female Asian body as a construction for sexual consumption. The
tension in her work exists in her awareness that what she is representing
- images of herself as the personification of this construction
- is not who she actually but who, despite herself, she wants to
become.
The narrative event was
represented in work by Greg Kucera, Patrick Lakey, and Kim Schoenstadt.
Greg Kuceras three-channel video opened with a quiet observation
of an urban street scene that is suddenly swept into an unlikely
event facilitated by a superhero, of sorts, who turns everything,
literally, upside down. A series of quiet, moments are found in
each of Patrick Lakey's photographs that are presented together
in the series Fragments from an unlikely narrative. Through
association, an event is suggested by using familiar elements to
portray excerpts of an unfolding story that resists completion.
Kim Schoenstadts Car Crash drawings are executed with fine
linear forms that complete the figurative "event" - story of the
car crash - but often transform or allude to other imagery at the
same time. A duality somewhere between the real and the fantastic
is created; the hard reality of what is depicted is teased into
comedic or cartoon-like representation.
Special thanks to Cindy
Bernard, Jessica Bronson, Connie Butler, Sebastian Clough, Ann Faison,
Mary Goldman, Jane Hart, Mitchell Kane, Daniel Marlos, Diana Murphy,
Kim Schoenstadt, David Shafer, Mindy Shapero, Lynn Sharpless, Mungo
Thompson, SarahWatson, and Jonathan White.
Support for Los Angeles
Contemporary Exhibitions and its programs comes from the Andy Warhol
Foundation for the Visual Arts, California Arts Council, California
Community Foundation Arts Funding Initiative, Getty Grant Program,
Thornton S. Glide, Jr. and Katrina D. Glide Foundation, Los Angeles
County Arts Commission, and the member of Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions.