L.A. Povera. Travis Diehl

Similar documents
Make art, like love Interview with Kendell Geers

SAN FRANCISCO LONDON NEW YORK BERLIN LOS ANGELES SINGAPORE CHICAGO AMSTERDAM PERTH DENVER

G r o n k. Max Benavidez. Los Angeles

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) Celebrates the 10th Anniversary of Chris Burden s Urban Light

Robert Mapplethorpe: the young wanderer s early years

This video installation Boundary is a metaphor for how it felt to be raised in a

Behind the Scenes: Mary Conner Contemporary Art

Teachers Pack Whitechapel Gallery. Isa Genzken: Open, Sesame! 5 April June whitechapelgallery.org

WHITEWALL Barry McGee V2.indd 2 11/10/13 5:21 PM

A COLLECTOR S CARTE BLANCHE

From Míro s Studio to Ledger Art, Standouts of the Armory Show s Modern Section

Inside artist Jaume Plensa's giant Millennium Park sculptures

furnace 24/7 and I knew that wasn t going to happen for me.

sagging upper sashes section 31

Peripatetic Georgian artist Andro Wekua on work, war and wandering

Hold me closer Ed it s getting dark. Antoine Donzeaud, Isaac Lythgoe. April 24th - May 27th, 2016 La Brea Residency, Los Angeles, USA

New York Street Art Coloring Book By Mr. Dane

Betye Saar: Selected Works Fine Arts Gallery, California State University, Los Angeles, CA, September 29 - October 2, 1973

AMF Installation Proposal. Festival Venue Fence Art Installations 08/01/18

General Idea, Mimi ( ) (all photos by the author for Hyperallergic)

The Quick and the Dead

Against All Odds 35 YEARS AT THE ROBERT BERMAN GALLERY WORDS PHIL TARLEY IMAGES COURTESY ROBERT BERMAN GALLERY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 25, 2014 Gathie Falk: paperworks July 4 to August 24, 2014

REGARDING ANA RoseLee Goldberg

INTERVIEW // NIR HOD: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF A STAR BY ALISON HUGILL; PHOTOS BY MAIKE WAGNER IN BERLIN

The Centre Pompidou Foundation announces donations and acquisitions in excess of $3.8 Million during 2014

Dealing With Head Lice

Green Kid. Mad Scientist. GreenKidCrafts.com. a create, play, and learn activity guide for kids. Issue 10 January $4.

HOW MUCH UV RADIATION IS IN THE SUNLIGHT

Bleeds. Linda L. Richards. if it bleeds. A Nicole Charles Mystery. Richards has a winning way with character. richards

BANQUET, MEETING & EVENT LOOKBOOK COLLECTIONS INCLUDE

ENDLESS SUMMER RECYCLED GLASS INSPIRATION GALLERY

Blurred Boundaries: Fashion as an Art

Night of a Lifetime. About Advertise» Paper Locator Contact

Joe Sola is Making Art

LIVING M VING ART. 96 Our State January 2013 ourstate.com 97

(photograph courtesy Earle Seubert)

PRESS RELEASE. 24 May 4 September PALAZZO CIPOLLA - ROMA Via del Corso, 320

ORPHEE ET EURYDICE CW Gluck Grand Rapids Opera. Design Prospectus. Set. Main Structure

No online items

GAVIN TURK. 5 April June Burnt Out

Art Initiatives In The Loop

carve composure from broken architecture and intimacy from faceless walls is older than Modernism. It s actually as old as light.

PRESS RELEASE PLATINUM GUILD INTERNATIONAL. The Emotional Side of Platinum Platinum Innovation Prize for Dominique Labordery

Video Doorbell Pro 1

Battery compartment 2AA To Reach Stibbar for supplies on your Tattooer:

International Art Exhibition and International Art Prize "Nothing but Art II^ edition"

FAST RETAILING a modern Japanese company and proud owner of the UNIQLO brand - inspires the world to dress casual.

Master of Architecture

Banister with White Wall, 1991 varnished and painted plywood 175 x 190 x 52 cm Smaller height: 58 cm. Courtesy of Frac Aquitaine

REALITY IS HIGHLY OVERRATED May 3 May 23, 2019

Distinguishing Between Real & Fake Cameos. By Danielle Olivia Tefft Copyright 2017

ESL Podcast 321 Buying a Jacket or Coat

Ed Lai interview about Grace Lai

URL: OWNER: FOUNDED: OPENED FEATURED LOCATION: EMPLOYEES: AREA: ARCHITECT/DESIGN FIRM:

MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS BULLETIN OF THE VOLUME LII BOSTON, DECEMBER, 1954 NO. 290

THE SOUL, THE COLOR, THE MATTER

Juergen Teller s Surprising Take on Robert Mapplethorpe

Preface Monica Castiglioni

Can Archimedes find out how the goldsmith tricked the king?

What Is Home? LACMA's New Show of Latino and Latin American Art Has 100 Answers

Rosalind Nashashibi, Bachelor Machines Part 2, 2007

SEARCH SURFACEMAG.COM. SUBSCRIBE Get Surface today and save 48% off the cover price. 8/15/12 10:29 AM

Launch of a new eco apparel & lifestyle. Shamini Dhana Founder & CEO T F

COOL HUNTING INTERVIEWS LEO VILLAREAL

Doug Stewart is a London-based art director & designer, with a multi-disciplinary skill-set, and 5 + years industry experience.

Art/Write by Peter Pitzele Anatomy of a Hanging

MillerCoors Exec Discusses t Way Forward For Light Beer

Sailstorfer. Michael. Sailstorfer. Michael. Interview by Ashley Simpson. Photography by Stoltze and Stefanie

Transformed. July 11 September 28, 2008

David Lewis. Barbara Bloom. Frieze New York Focus Booth D35. Randall s Island. May 3-6, 2018

TEXTILE MUSEUM ART v TRADITION v CULTURE v INNOVATION. Weaving together the past, present, and future.

Laid bare: The playful side of Robert Mapplethorpe 22 November 2016

Chinese Dissident Artist Ai Weiwei Hits A...

If you google GCC, which now has eight members, chances are you will find yourself looking at search results for the Gulf Cooperation Council, not the

A DOZEN NOTHING ROBERT KRUT.March 2016 A dozen poets. One a month. Nothing More.

A Lesson from The HomeMaker s Mentor Amy Hoover

a portrait between two : while the performer performs the writer watches and writes

Curriculum Guide. Learn about diversity, community, and point of view through the stories of Cécile and Marie-Grace, set in New Orleans in 1853.

to see and be seen, translucency of light, static and dynamic in a world of beauty and voyeurism; detail stands apart

Highgate, London, November 1985 This morning I found a black and white photograph of my father at the back of the bureau drawer. He didn t look like

WHAT DO YOU DO WITH THE LEFTOVER HOLES AFTER YOU EAT THE BAGELS? 1

Intermediate Project. Designer Inspiration

Request Conditional Use Permit (Tattoo Parlor) Staff Planner Kevin Kemp

The Sky Is a Great Space, and It s the Limit for Marisa Merz

The Painting s Not Really on the Wall : Mary Corse on 50 Years of Her Elusive, Seductive Art, and Shows in Los Angeles and New York

Ping Pong Ball Launcher

Exhibition // Muscle Memory: Donna Huanca and Przemek Pyszczek at Peres Projects

A GUIDE TO HEAD LICE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT

Warhol, Picabia, and Miro Embrace the Art of Kissing in a New Show

Heat Camera Comparing Versions 1, 2 and 4. Joshua Gutwill. April 2004

WHITNEY POZGAY ARIZONA WINERIES THE GREATER GOOD GET HEALTHY INSPIRING WORKOUT WEAR RESTAURANTS TO TRY

Broken Collarbone? No Kit? No Problem for RAAM Racer Franz Preihs.

EVENT & PERFORMANCE SPACE

No-Sew LED Wristband. Created by Kathy Ceceri. Last updated on :23:40 PM UTC

FIRST FLOOR GALLERY HARARE WOMAN-MIRIRO MWANDIMBIRA

Goulder, Iona. Petra Cortright on the Gentrification of the Internet. Amuse 4 April Web.

Kim Abeles: Art and Activism

Blank Label had its pre-launch in 2009, just after the crash. What was it like starting a business then?

MIAMI DESIGN DISTRICT

Transcription:

L.A. Povera Sunbeams shuffled through the gallery s dust-colored windows on gangrenous feet. Between wooden columns and around white plinths, past sutured metal and ceramified condoms, a black plastic bag dragged itself across the concrete floor, as slow as the changing light. The piece was Tucson Rug (2009), one of Robert Breer s more trashly kinetic sculptures a squashed and abject version of his droidlike domes. Here, at 356 Mission, in a show curated by Mitchell Algus and Olivia Shao and called Sunlight Arrives Only at Its Proper Hour, the creeping sculpture fit the mood. What mood was that? Uneven and post-industrial. Clean surfaces intersecting grimed. Warmly lit, translucent, and crisp. Objects seemed to drift, if not crawl, between being art and being trash. There, on a little shelf, rested a resin model of a rodential severed head a piece by Matt Hoyt. Up on the wall was Michael E. Smith s Untitled (2015), a lengthy sunflower stalk angled just so and fixed to a plastic prisoner transport seat like a relief. These objects felt casual and found, yet piercingly, obsessively sure. It wasn t just any trash: it had to be this way. Near Smith s piece were 30 cigarette cellophanes filled with tiny refuse, trash-world terrariums by Yuji Agematsu, who famously makes one a day, every day, on his daily walk. It s as if to know a place, you need to root through its trash. Or else, in certain unfinished circumstances, such as 356 Mission s roughly refurbished warehouse, on a block trenched with old rail sections and puddles of sewage, the trash on the inside recalled that in the gallery s surroundings. This, perhaps, to contradict art s tendency to grow aloof in its sunstreaked white boxes. Found materials seem to signal a kind of local awareness, even a claim to localness. This despite the fact that both Smith and Agematsu are from New York, and their work probably is too. For The Great Indoors, Klara Liden s recent show at House of Gaga // Reena Spaulings Fine Art, the artist made a point of locally sourcing her materials. Several pieces of furniture consisted of benches that double as stands for salvaged plywood construction barriers from the Los Angeles area. Liden s act of reuse amounted to a kind of site-specificity that was less invested in the building itself than the city around it. The barriers were painted with rectangles of a custom whitewash. Playing in their shadows were two videos: one of a pigeon in New York City, the other of ducks in MacArthur Park Lake, visible through the gallery s mission-style windows, swimming around a drowned shopping cart. This take on urbanism, part vampiric, part critical, carried over to the gallery s very next show, Bernadette Corporation s The Gay Signs. Among some custom beer pong tables, lit from within by LEDs and variously etched and printed with quotes from Sylvere Lotringer, was another that doubled as a vitrine filled with garbage from the surrounding streets. And, to match Liden s birds, BC fashioned a seagull sculpture crafted from a locally sourced styrofoam cup, disembodied feathers, and bits of plastic. In BC s hands the use of found materials took on the aura of Travis Diehl lives in Los Angeles. He is an editor at X-TRA and a recipient of the Creative Capital / Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant. 24 Travis Diehl

Feature

disaster the sort that formed the backdrop for their collectively authored novel Reena Spaulings (from which the gallery drew its name). At the story s climax, a tornado savaging Manhattan skyscrapers is a crude realization of New York s enduring millennial disaster not 9/11, but the real-estate boom that would follow. As with the galleries on the edge of Boyle Heights, the neighborhood s unfinished feel is its appeal. In rooting through its garbage, Gaga // Reena nods to the working-class neighborhood which it has a part in gentrifying and while Gaga // Reena was not the first gallery to move to MacArthur Park, it did so with aplomb. Indeed, is there something about galleries in transitional L.A. neighborhoods that makes them interested in trash-based, trash-like art? 356 Mission finds itself at the center of heated protests against the gentrification of Boyle Heights; activists have fingered the galleries there as prime suspects. In 2016, the NAH Fair (an off-site alternative to the Los Angeles Art Book Fair) printed a map of the district and described each business with brevity and wit. They got a fire pit outside, says the guide of the now-defunct Harmony Murphy Gallery. They often show art of found trash. It s meant as an insult your precious art but it s no accident that several recent shows have been proud to feature found trash. Perhaps this is partly to absorb that very criticism: galleries in gentrifying parts of town might say as much by invoking a trashly site specificity a conceptual retrofit, if not camouflage. Perhaps this is also part of the process by which what resists today sells out tomorrow. If the show at 356 Mission had an airy, depopulated feel to match its venue, and the two shows at Gaga // Reena riffed explicitly on the neighborhood outside the windows, the garage gallery Reserve Ames in West Adams, where artists are slowly but surely buying houses, has the look of a fixer-upper stubbornly unrenovated. In a recent two-person show there featuring Brian Dario and Christian Tedeschi, the sculptures had the dark readymade tang of Michael E. Smith for instance, a push broom in a form-fitting plexiglass box, or a Felix Gonzalez-Torres lightbulb piece remade with broken bulbs cast in blobs of glass. The show looked like junk you d find lying around in an old shed and a lot of it was. A conscious effort had been made to play on this confusion between the pile of boards and chain link fence and miscellaneous poles that always sits in the gallery s back left corner, and the similar items moved into the space by the curator many of which, in their turn, had been lying around the artists studios. Leave it to artists to appreciate a pile of yellowed lumber, or a disused commercial space. The ICA LA, newly relocated from Santa Monica in an old garment warehouse across the street from the downtown Greyhound bus station, opened with an artist project by New York-based artist Abigail DeVille. Over several days, DeVille combed Los Angeles second-hand shops and curbsides for materials shoes, red and blue party lights, hubcaps then clamored them together around a chicken wire tornado, beneath a punctured black trash bag sky. In all of this, she is the only artist among the aforementioned who declares that her work is specifically about gentrification and displacement. Themes latent in Algus and Shao s exhibition at 356 Mission, and central in Liden s and BC s exhibitions at Gaga // Reena, manifest as the whole of DeVille s piece.

Yet DeVille s remains an abstract gesture. Does it matter that her materials were sourced from Los Angeles? And does this proximity lend these displaced objects a particularly Angeleno sense of displacement? To the point, Liden dressed up her chipped and grimed plywood barriers with white abstract paintings, like fresh drywall over old brick. These barriers could have been from anywhere, but they weren t they were from L.A., and their damage was sustained for the construction and demolition of L.A. buildings. In that sense, Liden s installation has a particularly Los Angeles texture, as if the city was expressing itself on its own canvas. Yet this was also, consciously, reflexively, a fetishized urbanism wherein the urban is characterized not by diverse communities and dynamic culture, but by the convection of blight, displacement, and reinvestment. Such is an urbanism without a city. 1 Bernadette Corporation, The Gay Signs (installation view). Image courtesy of House of Gaga. 2 Kara Linden, The Great Indoors (installation view). Image courtesy of Reena Spaulings Fine Art. 3 Brian Dario & Christian Tedeschi, Untitled (2017). Plastic socks concrete pump hose, 32 x 18 x 12 inches. Image courtesy of the artist and Reserve Ames. 4 Bernadette Corporation, The Gay Signs (installation view). Image courtesy of House of Gaga.