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William Anastasi
Shelley Hirsch
Barry Le Va
Maria Marshall
Osvaldo Romberg
Lawrence Weiner
Curated by lair Rosencrantz
4 May – 17 June 2000
“Topologies” elaborates
on the demystification of the symbiotic relationship between art
and architecture. The exhibition complements the design process
as topological investigations through site specific interventions
by artists who explore the notions of space. Six artists explore
the subject from different points of view. The use of gravity with
the assemblage of objects on the floor (Barry Le Va), wall interventions
as deconstruction (William Anastasi), wall as a transparency through
video projections (Maria Marshall), the symbolic realm of space
(Osvaldo Romberg), text as defining thus activating space (Lawrence
Weiner), and the immateriality of sound to define an experience
of progression (Shelley Hirsch).
William Anastasi Incision (1966-2000)
and Untitled (One gallon of industrial high-gloss enamel, poured)
(1966-2000)
Shelley Hirsch Your Neighborhood (2000)
Barry Le Va Family (A to A, B to B)
- partially accounted for (1989)
Maria Marshall I’m not going to die easily (1999)
Osvaldo Romberg Red Macchu Picchu (2000)
Lawrence Weiner A MOUND OF THOSE OFFERINGS
THAT HALLOW LAYING WASTE & MAKING FALLOW A PORTION OF THE LAND
(1997)
PRESS
Show: Topologies
Publication: Octogon
Writer: Thomas McEvilley
“Topology”, read
by way of its Greek roots, means “logic of place”, or
“analysis of space”, or something similar. The fact
that the title of the opening exhibition of White Box is plural,
“topologies”, implies different types of “logic
of place” or “analyses of apace” are overlaid
on one concrete location. The concept implies something like different
realities coexisting in one realm (different topologies in one white
box), different projections of meaning overlaid on a single undifferentiated
foundation, various multi-perspectival focuses on a single objective
realm. But then the inevitable question rises: Is there really a
concrete substrate of actual space/place underneath the layers of
cognitive or emotional projections? Or are there only the projections,
sustained, like images floating in the air, by our belief in them?
The idea of Place with a capital p recalls the theological idea
of a Center or Navel or Connection Point whence a channel goes to
the Beyond. Such a Place might belong in Plato’s realm of
Ideas. But the actual or concrete place is not conspicuously archetypal;
it’s just a place one walks into off the street, from the
rainy or breezy or otherwise textured world outside. Inside the
white box there is a quieter and more reflective space cryptically
inscribed with various differing topologies like a series of drawings
on a transparent plastics sheets or a layering of chalk graffiti
on a sidewalk.
This curatorial agenda expresses the nature of the exhibition space
that the show inaugurates. It is not this type of space or that
type of place—it is, rather, an alternative space—alternative
involving Otherness—a space other than any recognized and
fixed conceptions of spaces or places. It is thus posited as undefined,
as a zone somehow preceding definition, a pre-essential, existential
space on which one conception or suggestion or another can be inscribed
by anyone willing to take the responsibility of proposing a definition,
stating a premise, laying down a challenge. In a sense there is
a ladenness or saturation to the space that involves it in the idea
of Center, but internally its layering of various topologies puts
it in a shifting field of complexification where the idea of Center
seems too simple. The artist’s works radiate around the little
gallery in ambiguous multivalent ways that point in a variety of
contradictory directions; as in the marvel of psychological projection,
these contradictory forces can coexist due to the lack of definition
at the foundation of it all.
Lawrence Wiener’s work has long related to architecture—to
the idea of an enclosing structure around human behavior which tries
to give meaning to it—and to architecture’s interaction
with language, like the inscriptions over ancient temple doorways:
“Nothing too much”, or, “The Uninspected Life
Is Not Worth Living”. In the topology of his work, too, space
declares itself as a place for linguistic significations to unfold,
but rarely with a simple and clear meaning. His linguistic adornments,
which relate to the architecture as ornamental sculpture used to,
have often been subversive in the simplistic way of obstinately
refusing to make sense within the structure which seems to be trying
to bring a meaning to birth. In the present case his choice of an
upright cylindrical column as the support for his phrases suggests
a comment on the supporting pillars of the institution. As the institution
is an alternative or hypothetical space, rather than any actual
posited space, its supporting pillars become question marks, ambiguous
suggestions of a stability that is not really there. So Wiener articulates
space in terms of language, but without any particular ideological
fixation
In the present work Wiener’s projection of meaning exceeds
in some ways his custom, which can me illustrated by one classic
example from 1974: “(Sometimes Found)/ Within the context
of change: /Arranges as (to)/ Arranged as stot.” The reference
system seems wholly abstract, hardly even concrete enough to refer
explicitly to space in the broadest sense: through the arrangement
of things in space seems possibly to be the referent, it may be
a purely cognitive process referred to, a topology of a purely mental
space. The emphasis on punctuation devices involves various witty
subtleties that are absent from the text of the present work. “A
mound of those offerings that hallow”, says this text, “Laying
waste and making fallow a portion of the land”. It’s
an unusual text for Wiener in several ways. First in involves rhyme,
a gesture of homage to poetry rather than to the more coolly analytic
style of classical Conceptualism. Secondly, there are religious
overtones hearing back to the myth of the Grail and the Waste Land.
References to the outdoor mix with hints of fertility religion.
Finally, as a comment on the actual location of the white Box, it
suggests that when an area of space is withheld from the regular
flow of life for special art events, the space, by being redefined
in this way, is both laid waste—stripped of meaning—and
rendered fallow-ready for new projections.
William Anastasi’s “Incision” is an upright rectangle
(16 x 13-5/8 in.) “inscribed not merely onto the wall, but
into it, to a depth of-”, with a utility knife. Related to
Anastasi’s “Wall-removals” (in which the entire
rectangle is removed down to the lathe of the plaster), the piece
represents a trend in his work that began in 1966. Like the inclusion
of Wiener, Anastasi’s presence involved White Box with the
historical topology of classical Conceptualism. The “incision”
is in the typical shape of a small painting, and occupies the wall
at about the height where a painting would hang. This an related
pieces form Anastasi’s opera participate in the deconstruction
of painting that was a major theme of the Conceptualism of the 1960s
and 70s. As a part of its de-constructive strategy it affirms the
idea of the dematerialization of the art object that was in the
air at that time. It affirms a topology of non-space, or absolutely
ideal undefined space, like the alternative space posited by the
gallery itself. Anastasi pointedly chooses to take something out
of the gallery than introducing a new object into it. The work is
about absence, removal, and negation, but not without a celebratory
mood in the tradition of Duchamp and John Cage. “Pour”
defines space in terms of natural flow, liquidity, an interface
between solidity and dissolution between culture and nature, object
and process. It might be described as showing end of the world happening
on a small scale right before your eyes. Undifferentiated matter
has undergone an ultimate meltdown in which feature and detail disappear.
“Pour” places the idea of space into a kind of chaos
which asserts a fundamentally lower or more basic meaning. It is
not the meaning carried by architecture but the meaning that will
erode and dissolve all the certainties of architecture and carry
them away on the stream. Taoist ideas of water always seeking the
lowest level, and thus signifying the opposite of the lofty ideals
and ambitions of civilization (signified by architectures in durable
materials) underlay the message of the piece.
Osvaldo Romberg often shows a space that is constructed purely of
tradition. He celebrates the tradition of defining space as an ultimate
or archetypal configuration. Related to architecture or the idea
of an enclosing structure of meaning this work refers to the specific
sites in the history of culture and religion, sites which have recently
wandered from the Gothic age of Europe to other parts of the world.
In the present show Romberg’s Red Machu Picchu recreates—or
relocates—a detail of the ancient Peruvian site on the floor
of White Box.
The low structure reflects the foundation walls of an archeological
ruin and also Romberg’s preoccupation with the floor plans
of sacred buildings. The level of root meaning is seen without the
shifting superstructure, which is treated almost as if it were mere
ornament—not even worthy to be seen.
As often in Romberg’s work, the underlying of the meaning
of a cultural tradition is viewed at a hotspot- the intersection
of religion, architecture, and a history of civilization in a broad
sense. It is laid bare as an enduring foundation at one like that
of an archeological ruin that leaves only the foundation and as
a stripped down mannequin or maquette of root meaning. On the one
hand there is an implied reference to something Mircea Eliade’s
concept of ritualized space as Place, Center, navel or axis Mundi.
But Romberg has de-centered the Center by shifting it out of the
western world and searching through other cultures for uses of space
which acknowledge its dignity with a reverent solemnity.
Barry Le Va’s approach to topology in Partially accounted
for…combines several of these themes. Twelve blocks of six
different geometric shapes like on the floor in a configuration
that recalls his earlier scatter works but with less sense of natural
randomness. On the one hand the work suggests a view like Anastasi’s
in Pour in which nature is affirmed as a force or reality more fundamental
than civilization yet not to be feared- a kind of set of constructivist
building blocks. Yet Le Va’s work here suggests architectural
ruins, as do Wiener’s and Romberg’s and thus carries
with it an aura of melancholy that is lacking in Anastasi’s.
The universe of ordered constructions seems to have been deconstructed
or reduced back to its essential geometric underpinning, like the
materials manipulated by the Demiurge in the Timataeus. The primary
shapes on the floor (there are six different types of blocks) propose
another approach to the idea of the primal place, the place where
forms arise, where things happen to spring into being. Not like
a place of Meltdown (like Anaximander’s Indefinite—or
Anastasi’s “Pour”) this model is more like the
Pythagorean-Platonic Place that is constructed out of regular geometric
building blocks that operate like archetypes underlying the more
obvious appearances of the world. The title suggests something inchoate,
primal, not yet totally committed to this form or that. Le Va prepared
the arrangement with a method of reading in mind whereby, through
following the arrows and making various combinations, one arrives
at fundamental gender distinctions and bodily structures, like the
construction of a primal person or an anthropomorphic universe—again
like that of Plato’s Timataeus. Shelley Hirsch defines the
space of White Box sound waves, which don’t go through matter
but bounce off of it. So, bouncing obediently down the hallways,
they honor architecture, and recreate in their own body. In another
sense the title, Your Neighborhood, like Wiener’s text, directs
attention outside of White Box to the surround. Nine loudspeakers—six
tweeters and three sub-woofers—are installed at both sides
of the entrance ramp. Hirsch’s voice is heard articulating
the phrase “your neighborhood” in various ways- higher
and lower in pitch, with the phrases dismembered, extended, moved
from mood to mood through screeches, operatic vocalizations, screams
and so on. Reciprocating, the topology of “your neighborhood”
flows from the outside into and through the interior of White Box.
If one were to read the show as a single narrative, the silent topological
models serve as an extended Proustian introduction to the scene
and its fundamental ambiguities. Hirsch’s sound piece strikes
up the overture, and Maria Marshall’s video at last puts the
character into the space, the figure onto the complex and multifarious
ground. Her brief video suggests a space based on the human body
and its potential for movement- specifically the sideways extension
of the arms and a minimalist sememe of raising them rhythmically
up and down somewhat as if flying or suggesting flight. Marshall
shows the human figure both occupying space with his or her bodily
facticity and defining it facticity. The tradition of the Vitruvian
figure suggests a metaphysical essence which in turn will define
the space-indeed, the cosmos around it. But the simple facticity
of the action in the space suggests, on the contrary, a more human
fellow in all his ordinariness trying out the fit between his body
and the space it inhabits, just checking it out, how far can I fling
my arms, how at home can I feel in this world, and so on. The figure
in the video is the closest thing in the show to a body with feeling-tones,
to the theme of desire at the root of manifestation.
As the narrative unfolds, the movement of the figure can be seen
to interact with the concreteness of the space, in which an earlier
industrial era implied by the loading dock is now theorized as the
erotic milieu of a catwalk. The fact of mercantile labor has been
replaced by an erotic of desire. A dim nudity seems hinted in the
darkness—though in a somewhat chase Old World way. The misty
image of a human figure over the walkway as a distant memory and
perhaps an anticipation. Yet underneath it, like the ground of a
painting, the abstractness of the various analytic approaches to
place eradicates the whiff of old nudity. Abstraction returns to
a level which somehow seems even more basic than that of the desires
and feelings of the body. This particularly layering of topologies
does not amount to a romantic view, in which space is dripping with
melancholy because of the sad things that must occur in it. There
is not in fact much melancholy in this show. The thrust is conctructivist—“let’s
build a world!”—rather than lamentational. There is
a youthfulness and sense of early prime in the conception and the
work that befits the coming into existence of a new space, its bowing
sashay down the catwalk. And at the same time there is a cautious
awareness of complexity and its Zenonian aporias.
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