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PAST
TRI-ANNUALE
(PART 1)
July
1999
group exhibition
The Annuale was conceived
fourteen years ago as a means to showcase some of the most exciting
young artists in Los Angeles. It has since become one of the most
popular and anticipated events each year, closely watched by the
local and national contemporary art communities. Many of the artists
who have participated in past Annuales have progressed from obscurity
to national and international significance.
In a new twist, the 1999
Annuale occurred in three parts -- hence its new name, Tri-Annuale.
Mounting the show incrementally, rather that at once, reflects the
interest the show generates and is meant to sustain a deeper discussion
about the work included in each part. It also reflects a desire
to include fewer artists in each segment, thereby allowing the inclusion
of larger and more ambitious artworks.
Each section of the Tri-Annuale
was curated by artists rather than a museum curator, as has been
done in the past. The curatorial involvement of artists offers a
new perspective on the role artists have traditionally played in
programming at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions as well as another
look at the growing presence of artists as curators and the theoretical
merging of curatorial and artistic practices.
Guest curator artist
Andrea Zittel curates Tri-Annuale (PART 1) around a flexible interpretation
of interiority and exteriority, choosing participants who are invested
in ongoing explorations and public interactions with their projects.
The works created for
Tri-Annuale (PART 1) were a participatory installation by Julien
Bismuth, who continues an ongoing "epic", which is as much about
deciding how to decide to make art, as it is about the object-metaphors
he uses to construct a visual poetry. During the installation, Bismuth
performed on-site and documented a reading of the project's "script"
to a donkey. The footage and performance will become incorporated
into Bismuth's ever-expanding piece.
Also in the exhibition
are an interactive sculpture by Matthew Greene, which explores the
tension between the desire to suspend ones disbelief and ones
imaginable lapse into disappointment; a set of short stairs extend
from a meteor shaped frame which houses a small carpeted and wood-paneled
room containing a single chair and overhead light fixture; a sort
of nostalgia pod, the enclosure is large enough for a single viewer
to close him/herself in a private, contemplative space.
Other works included
are an enigmatic on-site/off-site installation by Anthony Burdin,
situated in the artists car, parked behind Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions. Burdin's performance-cum-sculpture-cum-shaggy dog tale
challenges the viewer's expectations by promising only not to make
any promises. And, a large photographic work by Shawn King, depicts
an underwear-clad victim/participant being removed/offered to an
undisclosed location/source by a black-leather, biker-glass wearing
woman in an obscure arid landscape. The work plays on the dramatic
potential and intensification of an indexed moment.

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