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Form/Reform at the OAG
By Sarah Lockhart
I made it out to Thursday's opening of Form/Reform at the Oakland Art Gallery, which technically was not a Bayenale event as the Bayennale didn't "open" until Friday, but as said exhibition runs through the Bayenale, I consider it part of the shebang. The Form/Reform show of performance art and documentation thereof was uneven, though reliance on documentation of a work often results in a lower estimation of the original work than were you to witness said original work or be familiar with it, much the same way one thinks differently (and often less) of paintings or sculpture one experiences only in photos in magazines or catalogs. Exhibitions of performance art (and conceptual art for that matter) are a tricky business. Exhibition strategy, including the choice of how to present the documentation, is an art in itself, or at least a separate craft than creating the "original." (If indeed the work is somehow separate from its documentation.) Form/Reform was a mixture of documentation and actual performance (some via video). In general the performed works were stronger than those with exhibition presences that were just documentation or ephemera, with the exception of the DVD by Dale Hoyt and Hailey Ashcraft, which was performed for video.
The other big hit of this opening (in terms of audience attention) was another fun & games art project, Brian Storts's Portrait of Your Stupid Face in which (at least during the time I was there) the portraits were drawn by a little kid (approximate age, five). Storts's statement of his project has him doing the drawings, but the little kid was a better choice. The fact the drawings all looked the same (different hair styles, same face) was an unintentional comment on studio portraiture. I don't know whether Storts's own portraits would have all looked the same or have been drawn in a childlike manner. I also don't know if the little kid artist was planned by Storts or was a flash of momentary "brilliance." The portraits tacked on the wall don't really hold their own, which doesn't necessarily make Storts's project "bad." They rely on supplementary information—that they were drawn by a five-year-old boy wearing a suit to the opening attendees' amusement. I can imagine the conversation of people viewing the exhibition during regular gallery hours: A: These look like a little kid drew them. B: A little kid did draw them. He was at the opening. It was really funny. A: Oh really? That's funny.
The works that, at least for this opening, relied solely on documentation required a bit more focus or initiative. One's feelings about how much initiative should be taken by a viewer will effect one views the success of some of these pieces. Paul Zografakis's Fanfare float required little initiative by the viewer in that it was aggressively flashy and adhered to one's expectations of the object it was simulating; it was also obvious in its function as a placeholder for a live performance that was to occur at another time. In contrast, Jon Brumit's sound works were presented on an iMac computer (again with headphones), using the artist's Web site as interface. The computer suffers even more than the video monitor in an exhibition context. Perhaps it's the extra-contextual associations with "work," but art displayed on computers that aren't mere self-presenting slideshows often becomes art uninvestigated. There are certain exceptions, but Brumit's work was not one of them. In fact, the computer website display puts Brumit's work at a greater disadvantage than most other art work that could be exhibited in this manner. Were this exhibition to have been titled You Just Had to Be There this piece would have worked well. Unfortunately, this wasn't the case. Brumit's strengths as a sound artist are his sense of play in a live context, his facility at improvisation, and his unorthodox choice of materials/instruments. While his recorded efforts are good, they do not distinguish themselves from a lot of other recorded music in its genre. Being told in html that this sound was made by "shaving" a stuffed animal with electric hair clippers is not as compelling as watching Brumit pick up the clippers and witnessing his facial expression as he selects the stuffed animal, and shaves it. Elizabeth DiGiovanni's public decorator project showed the results of her decoration on a video monitor against a backdrop of festive deep red textured wrapping paper. The presentation was quite striking, and the project worked well, even "reduced" to documentation on a video monitor, perhaps partly because in its publicness and decorativity it referred to installing and exhibiting art. Mark Morris' video didn't succeed quite so well, perhaps for mere technical reasons involving the physical properties of sound. Exhibiting video art with an integral sound component is challenging, especially when there are multiple works and the exhibition space is small. Perhaps the eye-candy projection genre with no or ambient sound is so popular because it's easier to integrate and exhibit for the great majority of arts spaces designed for and used to showing wall based work—paintings, drawings and photography.
I am curious and eager to see next Thursday's performances, which will showcase a number of other artists, whose work was not on display at this first opening. |
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