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Beautiful Losers x 2
TAKE 1: Scott Hewicker
TAKE 2: Clark Buckner Lost: Beautiful Losers at YBCA Beautiful Losers: Contemporary Art and Street Culture July 17- October 10, 2004 Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Orange County Museum of Art Newport Beach, California February 6 - May 15, 2005 By Scott Hewicker You would have either loved or hated the show Beautiful Losers, which closed recently at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and will be touring around the world through 2005. It had enough novelty and spectacle to entice curious tourists, and a legacy of street cred to attract youths (it helped to have a free indoor skate park nearby.) Plus there was just enough smutty disaffection to edge up the place a bit. So it's no surprise that this show was a big hit.
But if you're not a tourist and not that young, this show may have taken on a different look and feel. Even if you are not familiar with this scene, this show felt about as fresh as Spin magazine. Perhaps it's the venue. YBCA has always felt like my dad trying to be cool. (You love the guy but stop trying so hard!) In trying to put a bubble around a culture with so many unique and individual tangents, motivations, and economic avenues, the curators established divisions that stifle this culture's potential to evolve into something even fresher, inclusive and free-form. It's all up for sale. Literally. The show felt like an ending. For a scene and culture brewed up out of friendships, community and personal/professional connections, the layout of the show seemed surprisingly territorial and fussy. Sprawling wall murals peppered with clustered paintings clashed into each other (a popular aesthetic strategy these days, and perhaps one that should be given a little rest.) A lot of work looked like blown up advertisements. It also didn't help that YBCA didn't change the architecture of the space from the prior show, the Fela Kuti exhibit, so the layout in the main space looked the same, only much whiter.
Chris Johanson's giant teepee structure with an interior multi-channel drum circle sound/ video piece and Jo Jackson's pile of skulls with animated videos playing in the eyes gave the show much-needed breathing room. They were solid freestanding structures that were simple, dark, mysterious and playful. The photographs of Ed Templeton, Ryan McGinley and Terry Richardson were not as interesting in a gallery setting as they are in Vice magazine, where the photos make more sense as fantasy lifestyle examples for the buyers of advertised products. I was especially repulsed by (and oddly attracted to) Richardson's gross, veiny hard-on and shit-eating grin that is in nearly all of his photographs. It may not be fair to ask whether we need another show openly feeding off the enduring influence of Barry McGee. While McGee's work (but not his presence) was very understated in Beautiful Losers, his long-deserved success is a catalyst for staging grand shows like this. This show has been a traveling success because it makes sense for it to be in places where these kinds of juxtapositions of art and culture are a novelty. But here in San Francisco, it just feels played. SIMPARCH's Free Basin, a companion piece to the Beautiful Losers exhibit, is the most inspired and successful installation I have seen at YBCA. It works on so many levels beyond that of street culture that I wish YBCA didn't feel the need to somehow validate it by packaging it with such an overstated show.
That's my biggest complaint about Beautiful Losers. There were many good artists in the show but you rarely see them showing with artists who don't engage in similar methodologies and strategies or hang in different scenes. It felt tired. Will we ever be able to see Margaret Kilgallen's work in a context outside of the scene she orbited in? Does her work only speak to that? Curating has got to take us further than this. Yet this show is too easy to condemn on artistic merits, which is not really what the show is about at all. Friends of mine who are in the show know that a lot of people (especially artists not in the show, including me) will think the show is lame and they admit to being slightly embarrassed to be in it. They didn't choose to be in the show because of the venue or because of the show itself. They were motivated by long friendships and by reconnecting with old acquaintances and that is what is seriously great, wonderful and essential about making and creating. Connecting with people. It's not the artists' fault that this show disappoints. It will help to like this show if you are connected with most of the people and lifestyles involved. You may also dig this show if you know nothing at all about this scene. But it's problematic to be an insider and also an outsider. Ignorance is bliss. Scott Hewicker is an artist and writer who lives and works in San Francisco. Take Two on Beautiful Losers By Clark Buckner
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