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The Corner's Corner
an installation by Matt Mullican
Saturday 20 May
through Saturday 22 July 2000
The Corner's Corner
was an installation consisting of a schematic recreation of the
house in Santa Monica, California in which the artist was raised.
Performances executed by Mullican, within this symbolically loaded
architecture, while under the influence of hypnosis, provided the
content for a video accompanying the sculptural elements of the
exhibition. As a result of Mullicans performative interventions,
which implied multiple contexts for considering the model, the viewers
understanding of the installation slips from stage/site to object/sculpture.
By recreating an architectonic mapping of this familiar yet distanced
location, the installation was meant to address childhood dramas
that underline adult behavior, idealized architecture, memory, and
experience.
The project is based
on the artist's long-standing interest in architecture and design,
as well as in notions affecting what has come to be called his "cosmology."
The title of Mullicans upcoming European retrospective, More
Details from an Imaginary Universe, alludes to the extent and
nature of his ever-expanding exploration into subjectivity and language.
Similarly, the title of this project, The Corner's Corner,
is meant to refer to the idea of something possessing itself. In
particular, Mullican describes the corner as "ground zero" of a
room or a building, "where the floor meets the wall." One of his
first performances was while in graduate school at CalArts, in which
he destroyed a building's corner, which would leave one wondering
if he has spent the last 25 years rebuilding from "ground zero"
on his own terms.
Matt Mullicans
early work, in the mid-late 1970s, addressed his interest in the
difference between reflected light and illuminated light, which
had to do with the splitting up of optical perception into its visual
elements and with the assumption that color, light, and indeed what
we view are variable phenomena. With his interest in observation
and subjectivity, and the notion that objectivity is itself an illusion,
Mullicans work emerged in New York in the 1980s with his well-known
vocabulary of signs. These images, both abstract and symbolic, were
rendered on canvas, in printed media, and in large-scale public
installations and were meant to function as a way to communicate
the basis of our orientation to reality -- a universal visual language.
This project led to Mullicans creating, through the use of
computer technology, three-dimensional models of imaginary cities.
Rather than diagram a utopic locale, Mullican was interested in
both rendering and participating in an interpretative and interpreted
space. Mullican has turned often these investigations inward, creating
a series of events in which he continues to investigate subjectivity
and interpreted space by presenting performances (both public and
private) while under the influence of hypnosis. Recent projects
continue to integrate architecture, performance, and design.
A Los Angeles native
who attended graduate school at CalArts (MA 74) and a current
resident of New York, Mullican rarely shows his work in this country.
He exhibits extensively in Europe and Asia with recent solo shows
at the Stedelijk Museum (The Netherlands), Marian Goodman Gallery
(Paris), and Mai 36 Galerie (Zurich). He has received numerous public
and corporate commissions throughout Europe and Asia from such cities
as Tokyo, Eindhoven, Lyon, and Amsterdam, where he is currently
developing a project for the Schiphol International Airport. Despite
Mullicans scant presence in Los Angeles, his work can be seen
in a public art project at the Convention Center, which consists
of a series of etched granite reliefs used to form the floor and
wall surfaces of the pedestrian bridge over the main highway through
the Center. The reliefs show the specific characteristics of the
site and the city, past and present, and incorporate, along with
Mullicans own signs and cosmology, images derived from universally
coded pictographs encountered in daily life and events that have
taken place at the Convention Center, in Los Angeles, and southern
California.

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