Joe
Scanlan
Product No. 2
18 September through 13 November 1999
installation
Joe Scanlan presented
a re-design of his nesting bookcase-- Product no. 2-- a modular,
infinitely expandable object suitable for holding books, dishes,
beanie babies, CDs, videos, vases, lamps, linens, candles, small
sculptures, flowers, etc. In addition to the product, the show included
"Serving Suggestions," photographs of the objects in situ; and the
premiere issue of Commerce, a magazine published by the artist,
(which also functioned as the catalogue with essays by Michael Newman,
David Pagel, and Laurie Palmer. )
Much of the artwork produced
by Joe Scanlan over his ten-year career has grown out his particular
responses to and adaptations of his immediate environment such as
his bedroom, his wardrobe, and his library. In his early work, Scanlan
recognized that certain of his mundane needs would be met only with
the creation of particular kinds of garments, furniture, or other
items that are not commercially manufactured. Based on a need for
economy, an appreciation of ingenuity, and a do-it-yourself nature,
he opted to fabricate the objects himself. A by-product of this
practice is that he has become adept at several trades, especially
sewing and carpentry, yet is in sentiment and in conceptual orientation,
as critic Maureen Sherlock aptly stated, not so much a craftsman
as an artist "closer to that near-defunct American, the tinker/inventor."
Pieces such as Nesting Bookcase (1989),Extended-wear Underwear (1991),
and Bathroom Floor (Improved) (1993), suggest flexibility and adaptability
as both lifestyle traits and as works of art.
Because they were created
initially for private use, to bring Nesting Bookcase as well as
other works by Scanlan into the gallery may challenge our understanding
of their role and purported intention. Scanlan's works have, as
he says, "the uncomfortable posture of only 'passing through' the
context of art -- where they are momentarily frozen, held still
for scrutiny -- before returning to their mundane uses." Of course,
the works rarely return to their mundane state because they are
mostly acquired by individuals and institutions that recognize the
capacity of the work to address, poignantly, human traits such as
desire, resistance to conformity, and imagination. In her article
entitled "Home Economics " (Arts Magazine, Feb. 1992) Sherlock says,
"[Scanlan] resolves the problem of his own specific practical needs,
while not being adverse to [his artworks'] patent potential. Added
to these are their not-so-improbable layers of artistic meaning
within a gallery context, but their aesthetic exchange value does
not preclude their use value in singular or mass production: they
can find a place in his home, Crate and Barrel, or the gallery;
meaning, use, and exchange circulate in multiple systems." Scanlan's
idiosyncratic responses to the limitations of his surroundings have
become the basis of an artistic practice founded on inventiveness,
adaptability, and hope.