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  • “Wall Text.” What Makes a Great Exhibition?, ed. Paula Marincola. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Exhibition Initiative, 2006, pp. 154-167.

    WALL TEXT

    Wall Text, 2003/6
    Ink on paper
    Courtesy the author

     

    The Omnibus

    David Hickey’s great omnibus of an exhibition “Beau Monde: Toward a Redeemed Cosmopolitanism” was a beautiful argument for banishing wall texts from the exhibition of contemporary art. Held in 2001, Hickey’s version of SITE Santa Fe’s International Biennial presented the work of twenty-nine artists in a super-customized installation that was created by Graft Design working in close rapport with the curator and a number of the artists. White walls molded and curved around individual works—works as disparate as Ellsworth Kelly’s classic abstractions, Kenneth Anger’s controversial films, Darryl (Mutt Mutt) Montana’s Mardi Gras costumes, and Takashi Murakami’s anime-inspired sculpture—so that the entire museum was transformed into one great architectural frame. Appropriately, the label for this picture hung outside the frame, in the form of a boisterous graffiti drawing by Gajin Fujita painted on the exterior of the building. Inside, works were identified by a free catalog brochure with short, informative entries on each of the artists, a map insert, and a curator’s statement on the premise of the show. All of the usual didactic material—from the introductory wall panel to the explanatory labels—was rolled into one hand-carried item that afforded viewers a chance to look at art, undistracted by text and labels.

    To imagine visitors at Hickey’s show is to travel back in time to Edgar Degas’s print of Mary Cassatt in the Paintings Gallery at the Louvre, 1879-80. She leans into a contrapposto pose, supported by her umbrella, while her semi-invalid sister Lydia sits in study with a gallery guide, both taking in the pictures and modeling for one. This late-nineteenth-century picture evokes the art world of Charles Baudelaire. The poet, art critic, and flaneur may be the ideal visitor to Hickey’s “cosmopolitan salon.” Profoundly aesthetic and deeply informed, Baudelaire may well have deduced avant la letter Hickey’s desire to make a show that would “very closely resemble my idea of a ‘beautiful world.’” He certainly would have had little use for a curator’s wall text.

    But let’s say that Baudelaire, who was as particular as Hickey himself, isn’t your anticipated audience. A critic and writer, Hickey is well acclaimed for his populist and philosophical writings on the value of beauty and visual pleasure––influential writings that cohere like a super-text to the entire SITE Santa Fe exhibition. One might see the exhibition as a culmination of these texts, which, even if you hadn’t read them, were elaborated by the installation’s shapely architecture and sheer gorgeousness (Hickey described his selection as “art on the verge of design”). Indeed, this show made spectacularly obvious something that is true of all exhibitions: they are constructions dependent on conventions––assemblages of objects composed in space for the purpose of display. And in eschewing wall text, Hickey chose not to deploy one of those conventions.

    It was a rare experience to encounter this choice, compared to the more typical scenario in today’s museums. According to critic Peter Schjeldahl, exhibitions are now a-jumble with “patronizing curatorial wall texts, the babble of Acoustiguides, and other evidence of marketing and education.”[footnote=1] However unkind, Schjeldahl’s remark points to a real problem. There is a lack of both rigor and regard paid exhibition wall text, which has become, like wallpaper, something of a dreary necessity, taken for granted even by the curators that write them. Or worse: writing for the New York Times, critic Roberta Smith chided curators for producing shows that “between the art, the labels, and the catalogs, are largely talk.”[footnote=2]  However, to therefore deduce that, when it comes to showing contemporary art, all wall text is bad, or superfluous, is to deny the complexity and creativity of a curatorial practice. Hence these remarks. Wall text is a curator’s responsibility. It includes the large didactic panel introducing the exhibition, as well as all the various-sized smaller panels and labels, marking specific works or moments throughout the installation.[footnote=3] It is an opportunity to transmit insights, inspire interest, and to point to the fact that choices have been made. When there is no wall text, other assumptions are being made, which also need to be read critically. Whether present or absent, wall text is an ephemeral literature. It colors our experience, but it is eminently forgettable. And just as the curator chooses to insert or not to insert it, so the viewer too has a choice: to read or not to read. Thus, paradoxically, wall texts can in effect appear or disappear on command. As a consequence, they can, and should be approached strategically and creatively––or should not be used at all. Bad wall text is, like bad writing, simply bad.

     

    The Omnium Gatherum

    Why are we stuck with labels in the first place? Embedded in the history of museums, labels also originated with private collecting. As recounted in Museum Labels, a l957 publication of the Museums Association, London, the first collections ranged from “the ominum gatherum of the individual for whom every ‘oddity’ and ‘rarity’…had a peculiar fascination” to the “Cabinet of the more discerning collector, who was usually a student of some branch…natural history or archaeology” to the “acquisitions of wealthy patrons of art.”[footnote=4]  In every case, it was the collectors themselves, who––prideful of their possessions and the status they conferred-––provided all the explanation on offer to those fortunate enough to be invited in for a private view. A label identifying a group of objects might appear attached to a case; there is a 1719 print of Pope Clement’s botanical collection showing a box labeled “rocks and minerals.” To keep track of their possessions, collectors kept inventories, and sometimes produced excellent catalogs to document and disseminate information about their holdings to like-minded individuals. As collections evolved a more public purpose, curators assumed the job of on-site explanation. The first keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, for example, did not receive a salary but was paid per tour. This system gave rise to some amusing eighteenth-century complaints. Recipients of a British private collector’s tour complained of their guide’s “requiring everyone to listen to him as to an oracle.”[footnote=5] A visitor left to his own devices in an Italian cabinet remarked, “it is to be wondered at that those who have had the Curiosity, and means to amass so many fine Things together should not have had the care…to add explanatory Remarks on such as are most considerable.”[footnote=6]

    The invention of the modern museum brought with it a mandate to educate the masses. Whereas visitors to early collections would have been on social par with their hosts, the Grand Tourist was increasingly finding him- or her-self sharing the museum with the unleisured classes. Entrance fees to the Mechanics Institute, in London, were staggered: ladies and gentlemen paid higher admission than tradesmen, who paid more than the working classes.[footnote=7] (Dress and speech declared your ticket price.) Inventory-like tags that had once sufficed for members of those elite groups, whose expeditions and sprees may have given provenance to the objects on view in the first place, raised more questions than they answered. In 1857, the British House of Commons passed a rule that, in national museums, objects of art, science, and historical interest would thenceforth be accompanied by “a brief Description there-of, with the view of conveying useful Information to the Public, and of sparing them the expense of a Catalogue.”[footnote=8] Attempts to standardize labels throughout the British museum system led, during the 1890s, to a series of reports by the Museums Association. One popular idea was to print labels on basic topics or types of objects for general distribution. Typically over three hundred words in length, these “specimen labels” threatened to turn exhibition displays into textbooks. The uniformity they sought to impose met with lively resistance and debate, as evinced by a swell in literature on wall labels around the turn of the century.[footnote=9]

     

    The So-Called Gallery Leaflet

    The author of the invaluable publication from which I have just extracted this history was  F.J. North. North was not a curator of art, but a keeper of geology at the National Museum of Wales. And while he confidently dispenses advice on how to label winkles and lions, he counsels that art is a different matter altogether. “There are, indeed, differences of opinion as to whether the things displayed in art galleries should have labels at all.”[footnote=10] This question was taken up by Laurence Vail Coleman, whose 1927 American manual for small museums was as serviceable to North in 1957 as it seems today.[footnote=11] Coleman parses the problem three ways. Viewers who take only an intellectual interest in what they see are apt to be frustrated by installations that don’t provide didactic labels. Art is, by contrast, a sensory experience and labels, however informative, cannot help viewers in their appreciation of art. They can actually hinder its experience. Basically, it comes down to aesthetics versus information, weighted on the side favoring aesthetics. The best solution, Coleman concludes, is to produce short inconspicuous labels and gather “together the real label texts into a so-called gallery leaflet.”[footnote=12] Solid advice that harks back to the nineteenth-century Salon and pitches forward to “Beau Monde.” But take a moment to consider the context in which Coleman would have been doing this leafleting.

    The small museum of the 1920s was a temple for art––modern buildings based on classical architecture are illustrated throughout Coleman’s manual. It was a place to see treasures of Western culture, including exotic trophies of colonialism, and, perhaps, some useful decorative arts. All of these could be read comfortably within the conventions of display. But what if your model isn’t a shrine, but a laboratory, a lounge, a forum, a Wunderkammer, a cabaret? Don’t imagine that the maverick director of the Wadsworth Atheneum, A. Everett, “Chick,” Austin Jr., kept a copy of the small museum manual at his bedside, while he was fixing to present the avant-garde opera Four Saints in Three Acts as part of the museum’s program for the Friends and Enemies of Modern Music in 1934. Perhaps your model is not a museum at all: it’s a site, a visual context, an intervention. How to label, for example, an earthwork? A colleague says he did not know he was experiencing Michael Heizer’s Double Negative until he was halfway across the mesa it was cutting through. What if the art on view was created specifically to defy the conventions of the small museum? It should not be assumed that the bottlerack, a task, or a room full of mortuary mist, will hold, or seeks to command, the same complacent authority as a nineteenth-century painting.

    On display in a small museum, Joseph Beuys’s Fingernail Impression in Hardened Butter, 1971, would appear to have more in common with the Ashmolean’s “a legge and claw of the Cassowary, or Emu, that dyed at St. James’, Westminster,” than, say, any one of Alexander Calder’s modernist mobiles. Indeed, a lot of contemporary art makes its initial appearance on the level of curiosity––by naturally raising questions. For viewers in pursuit of pure aesthetic experience, who may want to dismiss an object because it does not look like art, wall labels can say what the small museum won’t tell: “It’s okay that you don’t find this pleasing, it wasn’t made to be.” This is not to say that conceptual art, for example, can never be exhibited without didactics to support it. Certainly a general knowledge of the practices (and myths) that make relics into sculpture, will allow the mesh bag that Lygia Clark made for viewers to wear over their heads, her Máscara abismo (Abyss Mask) of 1968, to be seen as a compelling enough artwork. But to know that she intended the interaction as “an experimental exercise in liberty,” along with something of contemporaneous Brazilian politics and culture, is to experience the object more fully charged. Particularly in an art world that seeks to be global, this information need not be discretely tucked away in a genteel brochure or distant panel. It can be a straightforward presence, so that without breaking eye contact, one reads both the panel and the object. To wander around organizers Luis Camnitzer’s, Jane Farver’s, and Rachel Weiss’s 1999 “Global Conceptualism” exhibition at the Queens Museum, a gallery leaflet in hand, would have been incongruous with the immediacy of the objects themselves. One wonders, in fact, if without abundant, conspicuous wall texts, how much of the art on view in that groundbreaking show would have been reduced to mere curiosities.

     

    Believe It Or Not

    Artists have a lot to teach curators about the rhetorical power of text. Turning art into artifacts, and artifacts into displays of institutional racism, all with the switch of a label, has been a major motif in Fred Wilson’s art. Since the early 1990s, Wilson’s institutional interventions and mock museum installations have shown labels to be less than benign. For his 1992 commission Mining the Museum, he juxtaposed objects from the Maryland Historical Society’s permanent collection with objects and labels of his own fabrication. A cigar store Indian was declared a piece of racist folk art when Wilson named the anonymous Native American A Portrait of John Klein. Elsewhere in the installation, Wilson used spotlighting on an eighteenth-century white family portrait to pick out the black slave child. Originally included as one of the many signs of the family’s wealth and status, she became the dignified subject of Wilson’s display. Out of this collapse between fact and fiction emerge pictures (and people) that had been typically excised from the official account of Baltimore society. A pair of slave’s shackles was inserted in a case of silverware collectively labeled “Metalwork 1830-1880.” There was also comment on the peculiar habits of curators: a case full of arrowheads, their accession numbers showing, was called “Collection of Numbers.” Wilson’s practice stems from his experience inside the museum: he has worked as a museum guard, educator, and director. Indeed, he started his artistic practice in 1987 while he was the director of the Longwood Arts Project in the South Bronx. He used the space to create three different settings––an ethnographic museum, a Victorian room, and a contemporary white cube––in which he showed the work of three emerging artists. Wilson’s “Rooms with a View” raised interesting possibilities. The primitivism of Picasso would take on a whole different character when explicated through maps, short films, and other information about the Spanish artist’s bohemian tribe. Just as the Mbuya mask appears validated with a new form of significance when it is shown without any of those museum modifiers.

    Another example that comes to mind is The Play of the Unmentionable, 1992, Joseph Kosuth’s monumental installation for the Brooklyn Museum, organized by curator Charlotta Kotik. Staged at the height of the culture wars, Kosuth’s installation filled the museum’s lobby with “offensive” art culled from virtually every department of the museum and accompanied by didactics galore. There were quotes from sources throughout history silkscreened, like super-texts directly on to the walls; these were painted a museological mausoleum gray. The effect was arresting enough to transform the museum’s transitional lobby space into a vault of cascading words and pictures that streamed like water over the installation’s walls. There were also curatorial wall labels of every shape and size. And there were crowds of visitors, quietly absorbed in reading the interplay between words and objects. These included “pornographic” Japanese prints, with an encyclopedia definition of shunga or “spring pictures” from a tradition where sex was neither romantic nor phallic, but joyful. There were photographs of male nudes and flowers by Robert Mapplethorpe, whose work was demonized at the center of the then-current debates about inappropriate allocation of state funding for the arts. This quote floated overhead: “The artist does not create for the artist: he creates for the people and we will see to it that henceforth the people will be called in to judge its art. ––Adolf Hitler”

    There was a classical sculpture of a young male nude with a cape that, the didactics informed us, was draped expressly for the purpose of exposing his godlike physique to an approving Apollo. There were images of iconoclasm. What appeared to be fragments of Egyptian sculpture, ruined by the passage of time, were in fact imputable evidence of an ancient conservative lash-back. Following the fall of Akhenaten, during whose progressive reign art radically evolved, his name and imagery were mutilated and destroyed in order to excise his power.

    And yet, given the amount of information Kosuth’s installation imparted, its message was far from rhetorical. It showed how the meaning of objects changes not only over time, and from place to place, but also that these meanings are neither inherent, nor immediately apparent. They take time to both learn and construct, as well as to impart and challenge. In making our way through centuries of the “unmentionable,” we as viewers were impelled by our own relative sense of curiosity to spend time creating a bigger picture of censorship––and its interminable threat to creative freedom and expression––than we arrived at the museum with. By giving expression to (and facilitating) a flow of ideas, labels were essential to this process––an interpretive process not unlike the construction of a work of art, an exhibition, a story, history, knowledge.

    Interpretation is everything at the Museum of Jurassic Technology (MJT), an exhibition construct that hovers between the factual and the fantastic, just by the thread of its didactics. The creation of its founding director David Wilson in 1989, this Los Angeles institution presents mundane artifacts––teacups, pincushions, a tatty taxidermied coyote head, a picture of a waterfall, a small bed––in elaborately mounted displays. Wall cases with wooden moldings, text panels, maps, technical diagrams and terms, dimly lit galleries punctuated by dramatic spotlighting, scholarly-looking handouts and small catalogs, the banner and signage outside the facade, all combine to confer a sense of meaning upon objects that are impervious to such authority. As viewers, we are caught between sensible disbelief and a desire to see the Flemish landscape with animals in the distance––a monkey on elephant back, a bear, a lynx, a camel, stag, etc.––not to the mention the “bearded man wearing a biretta (a long tunic of classical character)” and the “unusually grim Crucifixion” all allegedly carved onto that tiny fruit pit standing before us in that case, which is itself partially obscured by the fronds of a potted plant, placed in front of it.[footnote=13] Indeed, the label reads almost exactly like one describing a similar treasure in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. But without an exhibit about “The Stink Ant” in proximity, the Met’s pit strains neither our eyes, nor our faith in knowledge. We see as we are told, unlike at the MJT, where the identity of the entire institution is a question mark. Part conceptual artwork, part dime museum, one thing is certain: this ersatz institution full of elliptical objects is nothing without its wall labels.[footnote=14]

     

    Tags and Tombstones

    In whatever direction there may be differences of opinion, it will be agreed that the label must look good.

    ––F.J. North[footnote=15]

    Richard Tuttle is known for making works based on slight, self-effacing gestures. He is just about the last artist one would expect to express interest in wall labels, except to ensure that they are out of view of his art. And yet, for his 2001 installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, he specifically requested that the labels hang large. He reasoned that, if this is going to be a museum show, by all means, let’s make it so: let the labels signify. And so they did, by being both there (some were almost as big as some of the works) and not there (as much as you were aware of them, they were totally eclipsed by Tuttle’s art). The labels themselves were of the variety known as “tombstones”: museum jargon for those labels bearing a work of art’s vital statistics––artist, title, date, medium, collection. It’s a fitting image, this tombstone. It recalls Baron Utz’s decree in Bruce Chatwin’s novel: “In any museum the object dies––of suffocation and the public gaze.”[footnote=16] In taking up its resting place on the wall, the label exists as a physical thing, a stone, that some artists choose to see as part of their work. Felix Gonzalez-Torres, for example, specified that the labels for his stacked paper works be printed as offset, in order to create an overall coherence between the production of the label and the work of art. Similarly, Louise Lawler and Hiroshi Sugimoto have both been known to label their framed photographs right on the mat. The titles of Richard Misrach’s photographs are etched, by him, on the frames. For artists for whom titles matter, this measure ensures that curators won’t bury your work under the wrong tombstone. It also allows artists to take back the tradition of attaching a gold label right onto a gilded frame, something curators and collectors once did with pride, and which now constitutes a form of museum critique.

    For curators of contemporary art, the thingness of labels is more circumscribed. Depending on the nature of the exhibition, labels may work better when blended with the wall as much as possible. Silkscreening is ideal, but expensive; however computers make it possible for virtually anyone to produce a clean label, which, if time and money allow, appears more elegant (less distracting) mounted on a bevel-cut piece of mat board. Typically, they should neither appear too big nor too small when seen in relation to things they are labeling. It’s also a matter of taste whether to select a number of uniform sizes or cut each label individually. Independent curator Catherine Morris recalls the ludicrous spectacle of a scholarly exhibition of Whistler’s print-marks, in which the tiny stamps were overwhelmed by voluminous wall labels. As tombstones went, it was dead butterflies commemorated by war monuments.

    Having coolly dispensed with today’s institutional wisdom, it’s interesting to know that labels were once much more idiosyncratic objects. Writing in 1957, North notes that the vogue among better museums for black labels had thankfully lapsed due to their being over-conspicuous and because they are “apt to be depressing.”[footnote=17] Although, I must say that I was struck not only by the beauty but also by the poetry of those at the Wagner Free Institute. One of Philadelphia’s museum gems, the Wagner is a perfectly preserved (and unpreserved) nineteenth-century natural history museum. A case displaying forms of sea life sported black labels with white print, some of which had faded, leaving the SEA LILLIES, CORALS, and LAMP SHELLS, transformed into the new specimens of SEA LI IES, CORA S, and AMP HELL. In his book, North advises that, although white is generally the wall color of choice in galleries, white paper labels tend to discolor and show up the dust. He writes of textured and tinted papers, from buff to lilac to dark brown. And he recommends, due to its opacity, “the liquid-white preparation sold for cleaning canvas shoes” rather than white ink. “Blue ink on a primrose background makes for good legibility” and can “make an otherwise dull exhibition attractive.” And he personally favors handwritten over typed labels, because they appear less mechanical, more personal. If you must use a typewriter, he says, make sure that the ribbon is “unfading,” the alignment is good, and that the small enclosed letters are not blocked[footnote=18] (a museum label should not look like a ransom note). From the 1927 Manual for the Small Museum, comes this tip: “It is customary to print four copies of each label: one on board for immediate use, two on board for reserve and on one white paper for pasting in a record book.”[footnote=19] If not in a record book, wall labels should be kept on computer file to document this ephemeral feature of the exhibition.

    The standard placement of labels follows this simple rule: because we read from left to right, the label should appear to the right of the object, at eye level, where it appears like a footnote to the work of art. To make the “reading” of art appear even less annotated, when he joined the staff of the Museum of Modern Art as a curator, Robert Storr introduced a new approach determined to further enhance the viewer’s aesthetic experience of the collection. He took the “tombstone” labels out from between artworks and positioned them in rows, or clusters, at the end of their respective wall. Longer explanatory labels on groups of works, or a relevant theme, are set off by themselves, ideally on a short wall, or column, not visually connected to the art at all. To subdue the visual crackle of print, Storr prefers a somewhat grayed-down black ink. The desire to free walls of text has lead to some further interesting solutions. Curator Jennifer Gross at the Yale University Art Gallery says that for a show on color, she color-coded parts of the wall and supplied viewers with a map. Not the most successful experiment she found, as “peop1e have trouble with maps.” Maps do seem more trouble than they’re worth. The walls are rid of labels, but so what: you’re busy looking down at a piece of paper, away from the art, struggling with the orientation of the room?[footnote=20] Far better was Gross’s plan for a small show of modern bronzes. Unless it’s on a pedestal, sculpture is always attended by the problem of sitting in space with no immediately apparent place for labels. At Yale, viewers carried the labels with them, like keys on a ring; a reproduction on each card made it easy to identify works, read the tombstone, and find some interpretative text. These are just some variations on the what and where of wall labels, which when treated as objects, can assume more (or less) of a presence in relation to the art on view.

     

    What Should a Label Say?

    There should be no set standards for labels. Every exhibition calls for the curator to decide whether, and to what extent, labels will be used, how long they will be, and what voice they will adopt. When the decision is to make labels part of an installation, here are some general guidelines. Labels should talk to the viewer and to the art simultaneously. They should be written knowing that the art is there in front of the viewers, who are already engaged enough by what they see to want, not only to know more, but also to see more. Imagine the label as part of a three-way switch: from looking at the art, to reading the label, which points back to the art. In this ideal exchange, labels broker a larger understanding of the bigger picture of the exhibition itself. The viewer is not asked to be merely a reader, but an interpreter, who is welcome to bring his or her own unpredictable and unaccountable sense of meaning to what’s on view. On a more practical note comes another triangular motif. Curator Laura Hoptman, now of the New Museum in New York, recalls being taught an old museum standard that set the form for wall labels as a triangular in content. Accordingly, text proceeds from the specific to the general, as if in answer to an obvious question posed by the work of art or the show. This question, once answered, might lead to a broader discussion of history or context, a discussion, which the reader is free to follow as far as she or he likes. Whether or not, as a curator, one decides to abide by this triangle, its form does serve to underscore a basic premise of our practice: observation is the primary experience to be enhanced, not superseded (or worse, obfuscated) by explanation.

    Labels speak for the curator, whose job it is to articulate the reason for an exhibition. When curators don’t use labels, or when the labels are badly written, it may indicate that the show was only vaguely conceived from the start. “Many installations are poorly labeled because they are without purpose and therefore cannot be labeled,” Coleman warns in his museum manual. (Coleman, incidentally also offers this concrete piece of advice: “If the concluding sentences of a label are written with a view to persuading the visitor to do something about what he has learned [like look at another picture in the show, or think about how it relates to daily life], the label attains to the greatest usefulness.”)[footnote=21] Thus the reason to label might be reason itself. This is particularly so in the case of group exhibitions, where a proposal or premise is clearly being constructed, based on a particular group of works, which have no other reason for being together than a curator’s whim. This said, I would reiterate that all exhibitions, including monographic ones, are essentially essays. Ever present, the thread of the curator’s vision and thinking is a factor which labels can account for. Indeed, being among the most privileged of viewers, curators should never take their information for granted, particularly in the field of contemporary art. Call it the new connoisseurship––connoisseur means “to know,” after all. Today it seems clear that to recognize quality is to know what issues, politics, theories, histories, and images are at stake for artists and culture at large. Exhibitions should make visual those stakes, which can, in turn, be explained by curators through wall text. Even when the premise of a group show is something as apparent as the color blue, consider how reductive this can become. Without a label to say that, for Yves Klein, “International Klein Blue” was physical manifestation of otherwise invisible cosmic energy, his blue pigment is apt to be seen as simply the same color as the rest of the blue stuff in the show.

    Having so heartily extolled the virtues of wall text, one might assume that the claim of this essay is that no curator worth his or her salt should produce an exhibition without copious amounts of didactics. Nothing could be further from the point. As outlined from the start, effective wall texts can be quite short (or nonexistent). More importantly, the writing of wall texts should be approached as an enterprise that is absolutely distinct from composing catalog prose or press releases. Never forget that viewers are, more often than not standing––a less than ideal position for reading. (Unless, like Mary Cassatt, you’ve an umbrella to lean on.) For this reason too, the language of labels should be tuned to viewers’ ears. An active voice and short sentences are one way to avoid inducing mental collapse on the gallery floor. Write as you yourself would like to be addressed. In his advice on writing labels, North recounts an anecdote about a label “accompanying a mounted lion in a large English museum: ‘Lion, a digitigrade carnivorous mammal belonging to the family Felidae.’ A visitor, asking what the label meant was told that the lion is a big cat which walks on the tips of its toes and eats flesh. ‘Then,’ he replied, ‘Why on earth didn’t the man who wrote the label say so?”[footnote=22] This story reminds me of one that Richard Torchia, director of the art gallery at Arcadia University, tells of his annoyance at a museum label that compared an Andres Serrano photograph to an abstract expressionist painting, while delicately failing to mention that the photo was a picture of cum.

    As much as possible, the label should appeal to someone who knows more, less, and as much as you do. Terms that are buzzwords in the art world (appropriation, Baudelarian, post-conceptual) can only be used when the meaning is shared and elucidated through the work itself. Why not equip viewers with the same heavy artillery with which we curators are armed? Language can be rigorous, or colloquial, as long as the overall tone is generous. It’s easy to hear when a label sounds pretentious (“I know more than you do”), or worse, patronizing, (“Dear ignoramus”). Unfortunately, it’s the art which then tends to suffer the viewer’s disdain. Nor should wall labels read like undigested résumés––what does it matter that an artist was up for a Turner Prize and will participate in the next Documenta, when you’re really just trying to make sense of this object before you? (And why waste words––good standing time––on listing credentials that many will find meaningless to begin with?) By all means, avoid mystification. The labels for the Guggenheim Museum’s Matthew Barney exhibition were laudable in that they dispensed with that completely expendable term “mixed media” and lovingly detailed every petroleum product and feather deployed. However, they were extremely ineffectual as interpretation, doing no more than representing in words the artist’s mythology––the complexity of which is self-evident through the work. As a colleague pointed out, this was a missed opportunity for a museum to inform a mass audience about key issues in contemporary art. As it was, a record number of visitors would have left without a clue why it is significant, or possible, for an artist to produce sculpture that visually functions as a film prop.

    In researching this essay, I tried to learn from different institutions what policies exist for wall labels. Where I work, at the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania (which organized the Serrano show with the offensive label), for instance, the curator alone determines what goes on the wall. In speaking to larger, collecting institutions, it seemed that curatorial departments were predominantly in charge of originating the wall text. These were often vetted through education and editorial departments. I never spoke to a museum where educators actually wrote the wall texts, but there were rumors. What seems objectionable to this practice (should it exist) is not some fear that educators cannot write about art, but that curators would relinquish their authority as creators of exhibitions to those whose job it is to instruct. Yes, there is much to be learned by looking at art, but a label should aim to inspire enthusiasm and a sense of acumen about visual experience in its own right. Why is this exciting or profound? not What can this teach me? should be the label’s bead on expression.

    When asked “who” their labels are written for, most museums described their intended reader as “college educated, but not necessarily in art.” Again, any rumors that curators must write for second-graders––no three syllable words––went unfounded. All of the major institutions have printed guidelines for label-writing. These guidelines set out the museum’s “house style” (clarity is appreciably the main concern); and define various types of labels (there might be appropriate lengths for different types, or levels of information). Guidelines might include rules like no foreign words (contrapposto) or technical-seeming terms (triptych); no references to other works of art or artists. Editorially speaking, these rules are not hard and fast, but open to negotiation. They mostly come into play when there is a question of sense, or meaning. One of my most interesting conversations was with Pamela Barr at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, a museum that does not shy from using words like chinoiserie, when appropriate, in its labeling of art. Barr has the encyclopedic task of editing all of the museum’s wall texts. She works closely with curators to ensure they write not only for art historians, but for museum visitors as well. Producing an active voice and short sentences are among her editorial objectives. She also works with exhibition designers. There are traffic issues to consider, so that information (and viewers) literally flow through the galleries. A giant didactic pushed into a main artery is to be avoided, as are flotilla of small ones shoved into a corner. When I asked her about working with Richard Martin, Pamela Barr said it had been her great pleasure and honor to work with a curator who would seem to have broken every rule of institutional label writing.

    Richard Martin (1945-99) is to be celebrated for the wall texts he composed for the exhibitions he created with collaborator Harold Koda. For many years the editor of Arts magazine, then director of the Fashion Institute of Technology, and lastly curator of the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Martin was a man of supreme intelligence and vision. Working together with Koda, who carries on the team’s brilliant work at the Met, Martin curated exhibitions ranging from ‘jocks and Nerds to Fashion and Surrealism” to “Infrastructure,” a show about underwear. These shows are known as much for mixing fashion, art and ephemera as they are for their installation design––design in which text played a spectacular role. Printed in scripts stylistically appropriate to the given theme, quotes from sources ranging from symbolist poetry to pop culture to philosophy punctuated the space. (Think of Kosuth’s “Unmentionable” exhibition, but cast conceptually in pink not gray.) Labels, long and short, conveyed a sense of passionate interest not only for the particularities of the objects on view, but for their possible meanings in the world. Martin’s style of writing was erudite and expansive, full of his own pleasure in knowledge, in words, and in the act of interpretation. Take the words from “Bloom” for instance. The opening didactic for this 1995 exhibition begins: “‘Bloom’ surveys fashion’s treatment of botany and of the brash paintbox of flowers, revealing expressions of regimen and silence, beauty and youth, new life and morality, naturalism and allegory.”[footnote=23] It goes on to conjure the fragrance of flowers, to speak of their language and fragility, to quote from Edna St. Vincent Millay, to liken a 1950s ball gown to “a bucolic, arcadian ideal,” and to see the influence of Burpee seed packages on a 1980s outfit. All in less than 300 words. That can be the power of wall text. When treated as writerly text, and not just a mode of description or information, what is written on the wall can provoke a receptive and associative state of mind. Labels have the potential of art itself, to be sensual, smart, and experiential.

     

    I would like to thank those friends and colleagues, who took time to share their thoughts, which inform this essay, and in particular, Geoffrey Batchen and Chris Taylor for their helpful readings.

  • “Return Guest: Chambres d’Amis.” The Exhibitionist, 7 (January 2013), pp. 5-9.

    Return Guest: Chambres d’Amis

    Chambre d’ami means “guest room,” and back in 1986, 250 Belgian francs bought a ticket good for admission to 58 of them. Valid from June 21 through September 21, the ticket issued by the Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst in Ghent looked like a must-acquire list for a scavenger hunt, with the many local street addresses and artists’ names arranged in numbered order, each with an empty check box. An excerpt:

    Raf BUEDTS          Wiedauwkaai 26    <24>    [    ]

    Michael BUTHE    Hoogstraat 68       <25>     [    ]

    Günther FÖRG      Oude Houtlei 113   <26>    [    ]

    The numbers corresponded to a guide that came with the ticket, which introduced the show’s premise and mapped the locations of the private homes in which the works by contemporary artists were installed. Ghent is a mildly industrial, slightly shabby Flemish city that reached a cultural zenith in the Renaissance, with a cathedral and altarpiece (no less than Jan and Hubert Van Eyck’s Adoration of the Mystic Lamb [1432]) to prove it. Not exactly the kind of place one expects to ring doorbells and find a Dan Graham pavilion in someone’s back garden.

    According to the exhibition guide: “You need two days to visit all the houses. Therefore, two circuits have been mapped out: Circuit A (red) on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. Circuit B (blue) on Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday.” A handful of works were visible without entering, for instance Norbert Radermacher’s horn-shaped tin bells on the rooftops of homes hosting artists’ works. Lawrence Weiner’s bold graphic text in three languages slapped every chambre d’ami with an earthy Low Countries welcome: MY HOUSE IS YOUR HOUSE / YOUR HOUSE IS MY HOUSE / IF YOU SHIT ON THE FLOOR IT GETS ON YOUR FEET. Christian Boltanski’s installation, visible only at night, cast shadows of a dancing paper silhouette around a room and out a window that could be glimpsed from a nearby café.

    Looking at my pass, which strangely still feels valid after all these years, I see checks by not quite all the numbers, but enough to earn one BONUS check entitling me to a return visit to any three Chambres d’Amis. No second checks were marked in 1986. I’m taking my bonus now.

    I’m surprised to discover that I didn’t write anything down when I was there. Especially given the intensity with which I experienced my first European immersion in a world of contemporary art and ideas, by way of what turns out to have been one of the milestone exhibitions of curatorial practice, I wish I had jotted something for future reference. (God knows that as an avid American student of Northern European art history, I do have notes about virtually every panel painting I encountered on this same trip.) All I find are some crummy snapshots in an envelope, stuffed inside my copy of the exhibition’s hefty and elegantly designed hardbound catalogue. Published in time for the opening, the catalogue didn’t document the completed installations but was composed instead like a portfolio, allocating a section for each artist to represent their own project. From these pages and my photos, plus some scrounging on the Internet (which yielded little), I can piece together some of what made this show so resonant.

    The first photo shows what looks like a billowing, shabby ghost of a zeppelin, a monumental work by the Belgian artist Panamarenko moored in the grand hall of the Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst. The point of departure for Chambres d’Amis in every way, Ghent’s museum of contemporary art was where you bought your ticket. It was also where (and why) the museum’s director and exhibition curator, Jan Hoet, first hatched his plans to infiltrate the city with contemporary art. Part of that posse of maverick men (Walter Hopps, Pontus Hultén, Kaspar König, Harald Szeemann) who kept curatorial practice apace with Conceptual art practices in the 1960s and 1970s, Hoet had a scheme for Chambres d’Amis that went well beyond a typical summer museum show. It involved much greater visibility, and the promotion of a homey sense of comfort and everyday appetite for contemporary art. It was also part of a larger scheme to win permanent independence from the encyclopedic Museum of Fine Arts that was then in charge of his museum’s collections and acquisitions.

    Of course, Hoet’s long-range plan—in 1999 S.M.A.K. as we now know it became an independent entity—was probably invisible to most of his guests at the time. To the approximately 120,000 visitors, it was simply a huge exhibition featuring major names in Conceptual art, Arte Povera, and the next generation of artists that was already emerging (it was an important early show for Juan Muñoz, for example). He invited local residents (many of them art collectors) to make a room (or rooms) available in their homes for the artists’ installations. Judging by the show’s success, Hoet was the perfect host. Witness the next snapshot: my friend and colleague J. pretending to feed Panamarenko’s sculpture of alligators in a little pen, Krokodillen, (1967), with the artist’s Aeromodeller (Zeppelin, 1969), looming in the background. Clearly we were having a good time.

    In the next photo, also taken inside the museum, J. is waving a copy of the guide, which is red like the cheerfully large stripes on the wall of what looks like a bedroom, except that we are in a gallery. This installation is half of Daniel Buren’s Le decor et son double (1986): a mirror-image re-creation of his Chambres d’Amis hosts Annick and Anton Herbert’s minimally furnished bedroom (complete with adjoining bathroom), where the artist applied his signature papiers collés stripes. In the catalogue, Buren titles the work in the spirit of a French bedroom farce: Pièce en deux actes ou Un acte pour deux pièces (Piece in two acts or An act for two pieces). The couples’ address is also given. But since Raas van Gaverstraat 106 was not one of the ticketed destinations, J. and I never found out just exactly how faithful a reproduction of this chambre d’ami this installation was.

    Who knows (or cares) if, after leaving the museum, we took Circuit A or B? Let the snapshots create their own order. In the next one, a long bow/boat-shaped sculpture, one of Gilberto Zorio’s “canoes” rigged with alchemical instruments and substances, stretches the length of a living room and touches down in a sunroom, like a traveler or a conductor, connecting two worlds. In the next, Kazuo Katase’s giant beam pokes out the window of an empty room soaked in blue light; on the wall is a picture of Hieronymus Bosch’s painting Christ Carrying the Cross (ca. 1490). Cross and beam visually intersect in an installation quietly suffused with references to Christian and Buddhist spiritual faith. I remember being moved by the fact that I had just seen that very Bosch painting in the Museum of Fine Arts in Ghent.

    In the corner of one living room, the owner’s pair of knee-high wooden Congolese figures (possibly the only whiff of Belgium’s colonial past in the entire exhibition) stand on the floor with overturned water glasses resting on their heads. This was one of the many mighty slight gestures by Robin Winters, who used his space in the catalogue to protest the lack of women artists in the show: “It is like an insurance convention in Norman, Oklahoma. Mainly imported men, installed in private homes. I am deeply critical.” Winter’s lament is only amplified by the lack of racial, class-based, queer, and non-European identities that would diversify a similarly large group of artists today. One of the few artists to push Chambres d’Amis in a political direction was Jef Geys, who chose to install his work in the homes of lower-class and immigrant residents on the urban periphery. He inscribed the ideals of the French Revolution—Liberty, Equality, Fraternity—on a series of doors that opened onto the walls upon which they were hung, like panel paintings.

    Just a train ride away in Arnhem, curator Saskia Bos’s Sonsbeek 86—another exhibition with a map, this one of site-specific sculptures installed in a park—presented works by a relatively more gender-balanced selection of artists, many of whom were simultaneously participating in Chambres d’Amis. The significant number of Belgian artists in Hoet’s show, however, demonstrates what careful attention he paid to his local constituency when he invited the art world to visit the peripheral city of Ghent.

    Hoet did invite four women artists, including Maria Nordman, who used her catalogue pages to claim her own priority within the project. “This work begins with the first visits to Ghent, starting in 1968,” she writes of leaving a door ajar in a building in the center of the city “where people live and work” to create an unscripted social space. Hoet acknowledges Nordman’s claim: “Her creations have precisely that dimension which Chambres d’Amis is aiming for: in which space is no longer a neutral, abstract, aspect . . . but a concrete, tangible material affected by life, upon which the artist must graft his or her work in a flexible, creative way.”

    The installation in the next photo, perhaps more than any other Chambres d’Amis, embodied Hoet’s desire to create curatorial spaces that come fully charged with material—psychic, historical, architectural, et cetera—for the artist to respond to and work with. Here, J. stands in front of a neatly cluttered desk in a room that is overpowered by an installation of wallpaper by Joseph Kosuth. Huge lines of text excerpted from Sigmund Freud’s 1901 book The Psychopathology of Everyday Life is almost illegible under the heavy black lines that redact every word. The wallpaper continues outside this room, covering every surface that a patient might see when visiting the home office of analyst and homeowner Dr. Andre Vereecken.

    Belgium was home to René Magritte, whose surrealism permeated Chambres d’Amis. A theatrical still life of a violin, photographed sitting on an upholstered chair, could represent the music student whose chambre d’ami Jan Vercruysse occupied. And in another photo, even if the train in Magritte’s 1938 painting Time Transfixed doesn’t emerge from one of those two fireplaces, the simple spectacle Reiner Ruthenbeck has made of clusters of bare lightbulbs hanging from the ceiling and nearly touching the floor in adjoining empty rooms is still disconcerting. Especially combined with the prerecorded playground noises that I remember playing in the background.

    I was surprised to remember the participation of Paul Thek, who died from AIDS just two years later. Forming an intense bond with his hosts, who told him he was welcome back anytime, Thek worked closely with the children of the household and their toys. In the foyer, a assemblage of household objects looked playful at first but was actually profoundly aggressive—paper tubes turned into an arsenal of nuclear missiles—under the weight of the artist’s catalogue statement, which began: “Shall I explain it all to you? What it all ‘means’?”

    And I shall never forget Bruce Nauman’s installation. I don’t need a photograph to remember being led by a uniformed nanny past children having their breakfast to a neon-painted hangman, with a jumping-jack-flashing erection, installed at the top of the home’s staircase.

    In his catalogue essay, Jan Hoet imagined the potentially alienating effect of works of art in private homes—the shock that guests might experience at encountering art under such vulnerable and intimate circumstances. He wrote that he himself had yet to fully absorb the show’s significance, since at the time the catalogue went to press, his experience of the art was still forming and impressionistic, and the public had yet to arrive. “Chambres d’Amis is a mysterious, sensitive penetration. Art discreetly pervades regions where it has been excluded for a long time: houses, spaces inhabited by people!”

    Thus the exhibition became a kind of research into possibilities that have since penetrated and now percolate throughout curatorial and artistic practice. Examples include Project Unite, a group exhibition organized in 1993 by the artist Christian Philipp Müller. Motivated in part by what he perceived as a disengagement with social realities in Chambres d’Amis, Müller invited artists to create installations in the vacant apartments of a mostly depopulated mega-structure designed by Le Corbusier for the French city of Firminy, itself an industrial ruin. Artists, residents, and viewers attended the opening, where tensions were running so high, a fight broke out. More recently, at more deluxe accommodations, the spectacle of visitors wandering all over Kassel, maps in hand, for Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev’s dOCUMENTA (13)—which spread through museums and parks and generally infiltrated spaces all over the city—was deeply reminiscent of Chambres d’Amis.

    Chambres d’Amis was much more than a sprawling group show inhabiting domestic and oddball spaces. In terms of my own work, I think its biggest impact involved being a part of a public that was so thoroughly engaged in being present for art. For one summer, Jan Hoet made Ghent a pilgrimage site for contemporary art—its manifestations and its mysteries. And I am increasingly amazed when I think of all of the individual, creative, cultural, municipal, governmental, philanthropic, and administrative forces that had to be inspired, cajoled, and leveraged to make it the success it was. (Paul Thek would have known another Pied Piper when he met one.) Whenever he is asked if he would do another Chambres d’Amis, Hoet dismisses the possibility as too touristic. So, should I be embarrassed to say how much I loved the chance to go inside strangers’ homes, see their stuff, and generally enjoy such a friendly view of life in a foreign city?

    I was recently back in Ghent doing research for an upcoming exhibition of the work of Jason Rhoades, who was one of several artists to participate in This Is the Show and the Show Is Many Things, a 1994 exhibition aimed at making artists feel at home in a museum; the exhibition unfolded over time and over the process of them making their work. Organized by the curator Bart de Baere at the Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst, with Jan Hoet at the helm, the exhibition posits a link between Chambres d’Amis’s lively embrace of artists and their work, and the burgeoning practice of Relational Aesthetics. After I left the museum, I wandered out into the city, expecting to feel some special familiarity. Instead I felt the opposite. Without a ticket, a map, open doors, art, and an animating public, the city seemed sealed shut, like a place that never was.

     

     

  • “A Chocolate Art History.” Chocolate!, ed. Carin Kuoni. New York: Swiss Institute, 1995, pp. 21–42.

    A Chocolate Art History

    When Man Ray visited the town of Rouen, he little expected to encounter the object of Marcel Duchamp’s boyhood affection:

    …You never told me about the Broyeuse de Chocolat. I had to find out for myself. It was a pleasure, a much greater pleasure to find out by myself. Would it be an indiscretion on my part to relate that, walking down the streets of Rouen with my back to the lopsided steeples of the cathedral, I was overcome by a most delicious odor of chocolate which grew stronger as I advanced? And then, there they were, in a window, those beautifully polished steel drums churning around in the soft brown yielding mass of exquisite aroma? Later when questioned, you admitted your pure school-boy love. Ton amour-propre. I translate freely[footnote=1]

    The two artists had collaborated extensively in New York and Paris, perhaps most famously on Elevage de poussières (Dust Breeding) (1920), Man Ray’s photographic documentation of the accumulation of air-born particles on Duchamp’s painting on glass La Mariée mise à nu par ses célibataires, meme (The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even) (1915-23). Also called The Large Glass, it was a summary of Duchamp’s esoteric imagery and highly influential ideas, illuminating his concept of the “fourth dimension,” where industrious lovemaking took place between pieces of erotic machinery. The male organ in this futuristic affair was a gelded chocolate grinder, stripped of its mechanism down to an impressive but inoperative drum. “The bachelor,” Duchamp wrote, “grinds his chocolate himself.”[footnote=2]

    Much has been made of the iconography of this machine within Duchamp’s art. But what of the confection itself? Typical of the titillating, teasing nature of his art, Duchamp’s grinder stands empty of its essential ingredient.[footnote=3] Even so, Man Ray recognized its source in Rouen, following his nose through the streets, stumbling upon the chocolate-laden mechanism as if upon a missing body—still vital, fragrant, and warm.

    With chocolate as both subject and object, the works in this exhibition take up from Man Ray’s encounter with Duchamp’s inspiration. Chocolate! concerns both the sacred and profane, the industrial and the erotic, purely physiological sensations and more intimate memories of things past: in short all of chocolate’s rich appeals and intense associations.

    Chocolate makes its first significant appearance as an art material during the 1960s, when artists took conceptual cues from Duchamp, Dada, and Surrealism, and began making art from the incidents, objects, and materials of everyday life. Among the first to include chocolate in this embrace were members of the Fluxus movement. Food—the collaborative dynamics of which obscures the issue of authorship—seemed to naturally lend itself to the Fluxus concept of art as an exchange of energies. One of the movement’s authors, George Brecht, defined Fluxus as a collective unrest with conventional modes of art-making, shared by artists who “have discovered each other’s work and found it nourishing (or something) and have grown objects and events which are original, and often uncategorizable, in a strange new way.”[footnote=4]

    A communicative property, Fluxus art traveled the world primarily via the post. Alluding to, among other things, Joseph Beuys’ sealed plastic envelope containing chocolate and margarine entitled Künstlerpost (1969), one critic writes:

    …strange paste-ups bordering on the forbidden flew across the Atlantic, boxes that rattled and wheezed were delivered by bewildered mailmen, lumpy packages were often “lost,” others were opened and resealed by clerks who surely couldn’t grasp the meaning of a monogrammed chocolate bar.[footnote=5]

    As early as 1961, Swiss Fluxus artist Daniel Spoerri was stamping food items “Art Work” and selling them at supermarket prices at Galerie Köpcke in Copenhagen. For Spoerri, food represented one of two essential urges, the other being sex, which he wanted to make manifest through art. He experienced cooking as symbolic of the universal life cycle and developed his work accordingly.[footnote=6] Spoerri prepared elaborate menus for his meals and monuments to their consumption with conceptual sculptures that consisted of each dinner’s plates, utensils, and left-over food affixed to panels of the sawed-off table top. He designated these sculptural tableaux-pièges occur at the end of the meal, when dinner is at its most decrepit stage and the culinary life cycle that began with the chef’s creative coupling of raw ingredients has run its course.

    In 1968, having already hosted a number of such dinners throughout Europe, Daniel Spoerri realized a plan (first outlined in a letter of 1957) to open a restaurant.[footnote=7] Restaurant Spoerri was located below the gallery the artist ran in Dusseldorf, called Eat Art. Together, the two spaces served as a locus for Fluxus and Nouveau Realisme (a European brand of Pop Art) for activities involving food. The program included invitational exhibitions, installations, meals, and multiples. For example, Spoerri consigned Jasper Johns, Lucio Fontana, and Frank Stella, among others, to design cakes for a 1970 Eat-Art-Banquet prepared by professional chefs. Sometimes chocolate was featured in the program, as when Bernhard Luginbühl, Jean Tinguely’s Swiss colleague, created Schoggiflügelmutterfigur, an edition of chocolate propellers, in 1970.

    Spoerri himself confected the original “Schokoladenscheissdreckröllchen” in 1969-70; the chocolate cake is reinterpreted in this exhibition according to the artist’s instructions, which include a dedication to Piero Manzoni. In a food-driven paradigm of creativity, excrement naturally plays a role. For an unrealized film scenario, Spoerri proposed:

    …begin with a close-up of a pile of freshly shat shit, then show its return, in reverse motion, into the body and through the intestines (X-rays) and then stomach, on through the reconstruction of the chewed food, as it leaves the mouth, into a steak which is returned to the butcher, who replaces it on the beef, which, revived, ends the film grazing in a green and sunny meadow, and dropping a big fresh pad of dung, of course.[footnote=8]

    In this exhibition, Spoerri’s coprophilic proposition is sweetly realized through chocolate. The “little shit roll” decorations, plopped in a ring around a great gold-leafed pile in the center of the cake, appear almost palatable homages to Manzoni’s famous sealed tins of Merda d’artista (1961).

    For Fluxus associate Joseph Beuys, chocolate fed into a larger surplus of goods—felt, fat, and flashlights—all associated in his work with maternal warmth and survival. Moreover, it had the almost alchemical properties Beuys admired in materials that, depending on temperature, shifted between liquid and solid states. In Zwei Fräulein mit leuchtendem Brot (1966), a bar of chocolate joins two sections of a scrolling band of concrete poetry, acting like a hilly landscape passage in a text which begins, “two women with shining bread, travel via…”[footnote=9] What follows is a nonsensical checklist that starts with “Télégraphe,” and continues with other stops on the Paris metro. The chocolate crops up after the “Pyrénées” stop creating a pause in the text, as if for a particularly difficult passage, that picks up again with the women now “returning.” They initially seem to follow the suggestive landscape of the candy bar, “Pyramides,” “Pyramidale,” “Pyramidon,” until the list dissolves into alliteration and proper names and finally ends where it began at “Télégraphe.” Perhaps in an effort to stave off the effects of blooming, Beuys painted the chocolate candy bar. (In chocolate parlance, “blooming” is the natural separation of fatty and solid substances that causes the surface to look white and chalky over time.) Covered in a coat of brown paint, this bar continues to appear shining and brown.

    Using chocolate and other foods, such as milk and cheese, to more Rabelaisian effect, Dieter Roth expressed an ambivalence towards permanence when he declared, “Not all art is eternal.”[footnote=10] P.o.t.A.a.Vfb   (Portrait of the Artist as a Vogelfutterbüste [Bird Food Bust]) (1969) was a series of small chocolate heads posted on boards, like suet statuettes available for perching and pecking. Even without avian intervention, the surface has grown pocked and pitted with time. Roth’s choice of chocolate and crudely rendered style of self-depiction reflects an image found in an autobiographical statement the artist made in 1976:

    D. Roth was born forty-six years ago…when the cannibal, awful Hitler, Adolf, was just getting the Germans going at their best hit, butchering war. Hell was loose, but Roth survived, shitting and pissing in his timid pants, poor shaking little turd…[footnote=11]

     Since 1968, Roth has recast this on-going chocolate self-portrait from these original manifestations. Roth envisioned the first one installed in a very perfunctory backyard fashion on a broom-stick pedestal, but, since 1969, he has also been accumulating the busts and stacking them on shelves into one monumental structure, the so-called I-Tower (“Selbstturm”). In 1989, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Basel allocated a room to the tower project, along with its companion piece, the Lion-Tower (“Löwenturm”) whose subject Roth conceived of in 1970 as a tribute to the woman he was living with then, born under the astrological sign of Leo. Like Bluebeard’s secret chamber, the door to the tower room is locked—a key is obtainable for the asking; Roth himself stops by from time to time to confect some fresh portraits in the small kitchenette. Overall, the installation is reminiscent of an archeological department, with unearthed treasures organized in relation to their sequence of excavation, all of them awaiting interpretive digestion.

    Bringing these experiments with the ephemeral and eternal into the commercial realm of Pop Art, Californian Ed Ruscha executed a series of drawings and paintings using chocolate and other organic materials, such as berry juice and egg yolk. “Well,” Ruscha said in a recent interview, “I sometimes refer to it as my ‘romance with liquids’ period, for lack of a better title… It was 1970 and I didn’t do any painting. It was the idea of putting a skin on a canvas that began to irritate me. I hated paint on canvas. And so ‘staining’ came out of that.”[footnote=12] In Well, Roughly (1971), chocolate and rose petals were pummelled into the fibers of the canvas to fill in the outlines of graphic lettering. The stained words create a poetic tautology of the title’s references to hesitation and aggression, delicacy and crudeness. As opposed to a still-life representation, this is a real-life memento mori, wrought from crushed flowers and foodstuffs that promise to fade and perhaps gradually vanish with age.

     

    XOCOATL

    The emperor took no other beverage than the chocolatl, a potation of chocolate, flavored with vanilla and other spices, and so prepared as to be reduced to a froth of the consistency of honey, which gradually dissolved in the mouth. This beverage, if so it could be called, was served in golden goblets, with spoons of the same metal or of tortoise-shell finely wrought.

    William Hickling Prescott, History of the Conquest of Mexico, (1843).[footnote=13]

     The forays that led artists during the late I960s to experiment with new materials established chocolate as a medium for contemporary art. But chocolate also comes vested with its own histories and meanings. Since people first concocted it, chocolate—which takes its name from the Mayan xocoatl and Aztec chocolatl—has been imbued with strong ritual, alimentary, and sensual powers. In Aztec culture, where cacao beans were bartered as payment for taxes, priests drank chocolate during religious ceremonies. King Montezuma was reported to have imbibed an inspirational concoction of chocolate mixed with psilocybin mushrooms as part of his coronation, and thereafter regularly enjoyed an unadulterated cupful before retiring to bed. Among the plunder Cortez took from Mexico to Spain were chocolate and gold. The rest of Europe had to wait for the marriage of a Spanish princess to a French king in 1660, when her dowry included the exotic new food. Thus introduced as a signifier of love and luxury, chocolate was served by eighteenth century courtesans to their lovers. Writing in the nineteenth century, French epicurean Brillat-Savarin commented: “Persons who take chocolate commonly enjoy pretty good health, and are less subject than other people to trifling complaints…” These claims persist in today’s chocolate lore.

     

    EASTER

    And in two minutes my mouth was full of fresh bread, and melting chocolate, and as we sat gingerly, the three of us, on the frozen hill, looking down into the valley where Vercingetorix had fought so splendidly, we peered shyly and silently at each other and smiled and chewed at one of the most satisfying things I have ever eaten. I thought vaguely of the metamorphosis of wine and bread—

    M.F.K. Fisher, The Pale Yellow Glove, 1937.[footnote=14]

    An ancient celebration of spring, Easter takes its name from the Saxon goddess of dawn, Eostre—a harbinger of life after the death of winter. It dovetailed nicely with the Christian celebration of the resurrection of Christ, which appropriated many of the pagan symbols of rebirth, including rabbits, hens, chicks, and eggs, lately cast in chocolate for holiday gift giving. A ready-made mold for a chocolate rabbit, Joseph Beuys’ Untitled (1978) earmarks the intersection between Celtic and Christian myths, traditions which in turn substantively informed Beuys’ work as a whole. For Beuys, who once tried to teach the meaning of art to a dead hare and whose oeuvre is replete with Celtic references, rabbits were important figures. Not only are they a traditional symbol of fertility, but as burrowing animals, they live close to the earth, the source of all goodness—spiritual and otherwise—in Beuys’ personal cosmos. The stuff of earth was further manifested in Beuys’ art through his frequent use of an industrial paint, which he called Braunkreuz. Literally meaning “brown-cross,” a reference to the Nazi brownshirts, Braunkreuz represented the intersection between the political and spiritual in Beuys’ art. The color of the chocolate rabbit—unmade but imagined—approximates its reddish brown hue.

    Chocolate Jesus may strike some as blasphemy, but Fluxus artist Larry Miller cites the Egyptian god Osiris, who was eaten en route to greater godliness, as another example, beyond Catholic communion, of food as an expression of religious reverence. His sculpture has a performative element. In its first apparition, A Cross (1969) was nailed to a gallery wall, but when summer temperatures transformed it into a runny strip and a blob on the baseboard, it was retitled Mass. The work in this exhibition, A Cross (1969-present) involves three cruciforms made at various times in a glass case, each at a different stage of transmogrification into dust alluding to ashes. There are also more recent casts available for eating, provided that the consumer signs a waiver releasing the manufacturer/artist “of all liability for any physical, mental and spiritual consequences.”[footnote=15]

    Part of the Catalan Easter festival, the mona was originally a simple cake, decorated with an egg, which a godparent presented to a godchild on Palm Sunday.[footnote=16] Over time, however, the mona has grown into a more elaborate edible, especially in Barcelona, where there is a old tradition of chocolate candy-making. In 1980, Antoni Miralda commissioned twenty-one of the city’s top confectioners to each contribute their favorite landmark, rendered in chocolate, to a diorama of Barcelona. Against a backdrop painted in pink-, blue-, and yellow-tinted chocolate looms the Palau Nacional Parc de Montjuic, the towers of Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia, the Plaça de Toros, and Copito Blanco, the albino ape at the Barcelona zoo. The installation was presented at the Galería Joan Prats in the Rambla de Catalunya on Easter day; the invitation was, of course, made of chocolate.[footnote=17]

    Like Miralda and Spoerri, Martina Eberle is an artist whose edible artworks cater to specific events. In conjunction with the opening of this exhibition, Eberle bought dozens of chocolate Easter bunnies and set them up on two tiers of a rotating pink platform under a circle of theatrical lights. As the temperature mounted under the hot bulbs, a torrent of action was unleashed: sugar eyeballs slid down runny bunny faces, ears toppled over tearing off loosened heads, while the artist scooped up the drips and served them to onlookers In the end, a molten mass was all that remained. These pathetic ruins are a grotesque abstraction such as Georges Bataille might have envisioned in his art of the informe—a surreal art that subverts the government of formal structure into an anarchic formlessness. Eberle’s apocalypse returns her once-beautiful subjects to the sort of primordial ooze from whence they came.

     

    CHOCOLATE WOMEN

    The story is told that in the seventeenth century Mexican ladies used to interrupt their church service by having their maids bring them cups of hot chocolate during mass. The Bishop was much displeased and warned them to stop the practice, but the ladies refused and so the Bishop excommunicated them from the church. For doing this he was poisoned, and died.

    Alma H. Austin, The Romance of Candy, 1938[footnote=18]

    On Easter Sunday morning in 1973, the avant-garde cellist Charlotte Moorman made her debut as “The Ultimate Easter Bunny” in a piece called Candy, created for her by Jim McWilliams and performed on the thirteenth floor of the Clocktower Gallery in New York. Winding up an account of the day’s sermons and parades, The New York Times reported:

    …The concert, conceived by Jim McWilliams, a happening artist, called for Miss Moorman and her cello to be coated with 60 pounds of chocolate fudge supplied by Savoia Bakery. She played in a setting of green cellophane grass with 20 dozen painted eggs strewn about, and she played what she described as “chocolate Easter music.”[footnote=19]

    Another “nude, chocolate-smeared young woman”—as Rowland Evans and Robert Novak dubbed performance artist Karen Finley in their nationally syndicated newspaper column—was met with considerably less tolerance by the media. Finley and three other solo performers became known as the NEA Four when the National Endowment for the Arts yielded to political pressure and, in an unprecedented reaction, denied grants to the artists despite their being endorsed by the NEA recommendation panel. The now infamous images of Finley sprinkling heart-shaped candies, alfalfa sprouts, and tinsel on her chocolate-covered body are only a small passage within a longer piece entitled We Keep Our Victims Ready, of which Finley performed a first version in 1989 at Sushi Gallery in San Diego. Mocking what women are supposed to be—“delectable sweeties”—she screams: “SMEAR CHOCOLATE ALL OVER BODY UNTIL YOU ARE A HUMAN SHIT—EAT SUZY Q’s, CHOCOLATE-COVERED CHERRIES…”[footnote=20] Finley says she intended her work as an aggressive attack against misogyny, with chocolate serving as a potent symbol of the verbal and physical abuses women are subjected to. “When I smear chocolate on my body it is a symbol of women being treated like dirt…”[footnote=21] The impact of her politically-charged chocolate statement reverberates at the core of a debate that is still raging around the question of moral standards, their place in art and their authority.

    Although quite different in tones and intentions, both Finley’s and Moorman’s works create pornographic images, with chocolate-smeared women representing an erotic invitation to pleasure or a grotesque display of humiliation.[footnote=22] In the writings of the Marquis de Sade, chocolate is the food of both libertines and their victims, providing sustenance for any number of forms of transgressive behavior. As Barbara Lekatsas observes in her essay, “Inside the Pastilles of the Marquis de Sade,” chocolate is the vehicle for poison meted out in Justine, a delicacy frequently served in the 120 Days of Sodom, along with the finest wines, urine and turds, and, in life, practically the legal undoing of the Marquis himself.[footnote=23] Throughout the writings of de Sade, chocolate turns up regularly between orgies of sex and violence. Commenting on this theme, Lekatsas quotes Roland Barthes, who writes:

    Sadean chocolate ends up by functioning as the pure sign of this dual alimentary economy…the victim’s food is always copious, for two libertine reasons: first, these victims too must be refreshed…and fattened up to furnish vice with fat dimpled “altars”; second, coprophagic passion demands an “abundant, delicate soft food”…Thus the function of food in the Sadean city: to restore, to poison, to fatten, to evacuate; everything planned in relation to vice.[footnote=24]

     Chocolate is a form of currency in the Marquis’ world of inverted morality, where cruelty and excess are rewarded at the expense of innocence and virtue. With their opposed imageries of bitter punishment and sweet reward, Finley’s and Moorman’s chocolate-smeared women might be seen as the flip sides of the coin of the realm. Janine Antoni’s series Lick and Lather (1993) comes up a conflicted combination of the two. These pairs of 19th-century style self-portrait busts, one made of chocolate, the other of soap, create a face-off between pleasure and purity, indulgence and restraint. What appears to be the effects of time are actually the results of self-mutilation and suppression. The artist bathed with the soap heads in the tub and licked the chocolate ones mute so that the features of both heads appear smoothed down to near anonymity.

    Like Roth, Antoni has worked extensively in chocolate. Of her monumental Chocolate Gnaw (1992), covered with tooth-marks and other violent signs of desperate consumption, she told an interviewer how her choice of chocolate as a material led her to develop the work’s conceptual core:

    I started with the idea that I wanted to chew on a 600 pound cube of chocolate. I took the first bite and then, whether I swallowed it or spit it out decided the meaning. When I spit it out, I knew I wanted to make the spit-out part into something else. Then it occurred to me that this was related to bulimia. So I started researching bulimia and found out that chocolate contains phenylethylamine, a chemical produced by the body in love—so from the gnawed chocolate I produced hearts.[footnote=25]

    Antoni’s works have been seen as a critique of minimalism, returning the presence of a desiring, uncontrolled body to that paradigm’s pristine and ordered program. Chocolate Gnaw was followed by a cube of lard of the same size, which the artist also nibbled and chewed on. Those bits were later shaped into lipsticks.

    Women and chocolate have a complicated relationship. As Diane Barthel-Bouchier points out in her preceding essay, “chocoholics” are predominantly female. (Men tend to crave meat.)[footnote=26] Chemically a stimulant, chocolate is considered addictive; it contains both caffeine and phenylethylamine, the endorphin associated with physical highs like exercise and orgasms.[footnote=27] A recent study, Why Women Need Chocolate, suggested the craving has at its source the desire for fertile and healthy reproductive bodies, turning chocolate consumption into a survival mechanism for the entire species.[footnote=28] Women’s biological needs are countered by their fear of over-indulgence, symptomatic of the sometimes perversely difficult female relationship between food and body. Artist Anya Gallaccio observed of the reaction to her installation Bite the Bullet (1992), which featured a heap of chocolate guns surrounded by a spray of real bullets, that men tended to focus on the impotence of the candy weapons, while women recognized in the phallically-cast chocolate a dangerously self-destructive appetite.

    Jana Sterbak’s Catacombs (1992)—a skull and other bones cast in extra-bitter chocolate—might be seen as a generally dark-humored take on death-by-chocolate. However, seen in conjunction with earlier works by Sterbak, specifically Vanitas: Flesh Dress for an Albino Anorexic (1987), a gown stitched from raw steaks, the bones take on a more intricate and gendered reading. In Western culture, catacombs and vanitas serve as reminders of the transience of existence. In Sterbak’s art, as the gown gradually cures and hardens into a translucent carapace and the chocolate bones whiten and eventually turn to dust, desiccated bodies pose a fragile barrier between life and death. With vanity a weakness traditionally ascribed to women in their role as commodities of men’s desire, these works also seem to signify the end of a particularly unhealthy relationship between the female body and the food which made her flesh. However, in these chocolate bones lies the peculiar contradiction between a martyr’s program of austerity and denial and the flagrant luxury and self indulgence of gorging oneself to death on chocolate. This ambiguity brings Sterbak’s Catacombs up short of the simple moral purpose of a traditional vanitas, leaving it open to a life of tantalizing speculation.

    By her own design, Hannah Wilke appears as both consumer and consumed in Venus Pareve (1982), a series of casts originally done in chocolate. According to Jewish dietary law, pareve signifies that a food contains neither milk nor meat, and can therefore be eaten with anything. Thus the beautiful Wilke offers up the mythic Roman goddess of love with her own religious seal of approval. In anticipation of the day when the chocolate figurines ran out, Wilke cast an additional edition of forty in plaster, painted in vibrant monochromes. Wilke, whose given name was Arlene Hannah Butter, claims to have grown up with an erotic awareness of her body in relationship to food: “As an American girl born with the name Butter in 1940, I was often confused when I heard what it was like to be used, to be spread, to feel soft, to melt in your mouth.”[footnote=29] Like butter, chocolate also melts just below body temperature, producing a pleasant cooling sensation on the tongue. It also has additional associations with eros and addiction. Wilke’s chocolate torsos have the potential of fulfilling her precocious fantasies of being licked and eaten, at the same time as they embody a certain narcissistic conceptual strategy. The artist’s plaster sculptures outlast the chocolate ones: Having entrapped the viewer’s attention by way of a simple weakness for chocolate (or is it flesh?), Wilke redirects that desire to a material both inert and inedible.


    THE CHOCOLATE WALL

    …(Julia) felt in the pockets of her overalls and produced a small slab of chocolate. She broke it in half and gave one of the pieces to Winston. Even before he had taken it he knew by the smell that it was very unusual chocolate. It was dark and shiny, and was wrapped in silver paper. Chocolate normally was dull-brown crumbly stuff that tasted…like the smoke of rubbish fire. But at some time or another he had tasted chocolate like the piece she had given him. The first whiff of its scent had stirred up some memory which he could not pin down, but which was powerful and troubling.

    George Orwell, 1984, 1949.[footnote=30]

    For the 35th Venice Biennale, Ed Ruscha produced Chocolate Room. The year was 1970, and many of Ruscha’s compatriots who were slated to participate in this international exhibition declined to do so, as part of a mass protest against the American government’s involvement with the Vietnam War.[footnote=31] Ultimately Ruscha’s room became a format for dissent, and even an allegory of destructive intervention. The gallery was completely shingled with sheets of paper (360 in all) silkscreened entirely over in Nestlé chocolate. Throughout the course of the exhibition, visitors graffitied the walls—using moistened fingertips to write through the chocolate—with anti-war sentiments. Finally phalanxes of Venetian ants attacked the remains, creating a beautiful tracery prior to actually destroying the piece.[footnote=32]

    A common luxury cultivated in colonial outposts throughout the non-industrialized world and manufactured by multinational corporations, chocolate is the product of global politics and world economies. In 1981, Hans Haacke captured the questionable relationship between big business and culture when he made contemporary art collector and chocolate baron Peter Ludwig the subject of a work entitled Pralinenmeister (The Chocolate Master) (1981). The piece consists of a series of seven diptychs, each photo-silkscreened with a portrait of Ludwig, a candy bar wrapper from one of Ludwig’s Monheim Group subsidiaries, and a text detailing how chocolate’s gross earnings have helped leverage Ludwig’s cultural and economic ambitions.[footnote=33]

    Although no candy per se was involved in Haacke’s work, chocolate effectively stands for capitalist culture, prefiguring its actual appearance in British sculptor Helen Chadwick’s Special Relationship (1995). In this model of British and American relations during the Ronald Reagan/ Margaret Thatcher years, two giant bars of Cadbury’s chocolate are beset by huge live cockroaches. (Cadbury’s purveys to the Queen; roaches eat anything.) Everything is inflated, except the size of the vitrine, which just barely houses the bugs and their rich food. One anticipates that over time, the insects will have either gorged themselves to death or exploded their population into unsustainable numbers, bringing a predictably unhappy close to this affair.[footnote=34]

    While Haacke and Chadwick use chocolate to ponder issues of empire, the collaborative team of Simon Grennan and Christopher Sperandio focuses on this consumer product in the context of everyday life. As part of Culture in Action, an ambitious city-wide public art project held in Chicago during the summer of 1993, the artists facilitated the packaging of a limited edition chocolate candy bar by members of the Bakery Confectionery and Tobacco Workers Union, Local 552. Going against the grain of popular marketing practices, which tend to remove any vestiges of labor from the eyes (and conscience) of a consumer, the workers named their product “We Got It!,” and put an American flag as well as their portraits and signatures on the wrapper. All of these decisions were democratically voted upon; the combination of purple and yellow was inspired by the clothing of one of the participants. With billboards emblazoning the city, the bar sold successfully throughout the duration of the exhibition, making chocolate the popular currency in a project whose overall aim was to incorporate communities typically disenfranchised by museum culture.

    Four Walls, an art gallery in Brooklyn, New York, invited twelve artists to design chocolate bonbons that would be produced and sold as a multiple to benefit the Four Walls Slide and Film Club.[footnote=35] Elaine Tin-Nyo’s string of beads cast from white chocolate brings to mind the old adage about pearls before swine. Drawing attention to the phallus shape of the traditional bar, Fred Tomaselli came up with a bi-purpose “Hershey’s,” good for “He” or “she” just by erasing a few of the letters. (This work is reminiscent of the series of Bog Queen collage drawings (1960-80) by neo-Dadaist Al Hansen, who used cut-outs of just the “she” part of the same candy bar’s wrapper.) Polly Apfelbaum, a self-declared chocoholic, confected her own “Polly” bar.

    Barbara Bloom joins Antoni, Apfelbaum, Roth, and Wilke in the pantheon of artists who have commemorated themselves in chocolate. As part of her installation project The Reign of Narcissism (1989), she produced the series Portrait Chocolate: Bloom. These tastefully packaged pastilles, each one molded with a profile of the artist, were one of a number of souvenir-type items that included classically re-styled portrait busts, tombstones, and cameos all in honor of Barbara Bloom. They fit into a larger discourse on accumulative impulse and vanity, presented in the form of a “Guide Book.”[footnote=36] This included parables excerpted from Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray and Virginia Woolf’s The Lady and the Looking-Glass, for example, that together with Bloom’s self-absorbed objects speculate on the potential of achieving immortality through art. Catalogued like objects of virtue and illustrated together on a page in the guide book are a Queen Wilhelmina peppermint, a Queen Victoria and Prince Albert chocolate coin, and an Egyptian mummy-mask chocolate produced by Harrod’s of London, suggesting a noble, even transcendent purpose in Bloom’s own candy, which appears alongside them. For those with less particular palettes, Stephen Shanabrook has honored anonymous folk with boxes of chocolate body-parts cast at morgues in Russia (Evisceration of Waited Moments, 1993), and Ohio (Unidentified, 1993). Reflective of what Shanabrook found to be the bigger picture at each locale, most of those commemorated in the first box died from natural causes, while the latter box observes more violent endings, such as deaths by gun-shot wounds. All the candies are wrapped in brilliantly-colored foil.

    For an artists’ residency program called Furkart, based in a former inn located high on a peak in the Swiss Alps, Swiss artist Ian Anüll created an untitled edition of chocolate bars. Images of flying saucers on the front of the wrapper were somewhat demystified by three smaller photographs on the backside. The first was a joke-photo taken from a 1950 April Foo1’s Day edition of a Swiss newspaper supposedly depicting an extraterrestrial being held captive by uniformed officers. The second showed the same picture as it cropped up in the files of the American F. B. I.; the third showed it illustrating an authoritative report presenting evidence of life on other planets. Loaded into one of the hotel’s original candy displays, Anüll’s Untitled (Extraterrestrial) (1992) evoke a sci-fi fantasy, which begins on a remote mountaintop and ends in deliverance in outerspace.

    Chocolate candy bars crop up on another fictional alpine trek, this time offering ready-made assistance to the cartoon personages assembled by Karen Kilimnik in her scatter-style installation Switzerland, the Pink Panther & Peter Sellers & Boris & Natasha in Siberia (1991). Like Dada artist Kurt Schwitters, who frequently included candy bar wrappers in his collages of everyday ephemera, Kilimnik works a vein of Pop montage. However, compared to Schwitters’s train-station sweepings, Kilimnik’s collages are less democratic, and far more narrative in their contents. Her tableaux are reminiscent of Joseph Cornell boxes come unglued, and they evince obsessions similar to   Cornell’s, who also had a penchant for ballerinas and international travel. Kilimnik’s work also reflects her passion for sweets, particularly chocolate. A recent sculpture by Kilimnik, Poisoned Chocolates (1989), featured poison-laced chocolate balanced on a scale with an ounce of cocaine-like material, equating the seriousness of her addiction with one that is actually illegal. S.J. Curtis’ Courtship (Mutual Feeding) (1994) echoes this image of addiction with pieces of strychnine-saturated chocolate nestled between a pair of hypodermic syringes in a velvet-lined case.

    As delicate as cobwebs, Brazilian artist Fernanda Gomes’ wall drawings are collages of ephemera. Silk and linen threads, lilliputian pages torn from miniature dictionaries, grasses, and chocolate are materials which might be seen to signify (respectively) the costume, language, land, and natural economy of some unknown place. Through her minimal artworks, Gomes reaches back into culture of which barely a trace remains either—a non-invasive form of intervention, the antithesis of colonization or exploitation. In the site-specific drawing she created for this exhibition, chocolate is a barely whispered presence. Minute blobs of white chocolate weld pale threads together; part of a Droste pastille is affixed to the wall—with the “te” spelling out the Portuguese word for “you”—and has been painted over in a coat of opaque white paint. This final gesture is the artist’s homage to Beuys’ obscuring the brown chocolate with brown paint in his Two Women multiple.

    Chocolate is part of the texture of everyday life. Or so seems to be the case with Gomes’ subdued wall-drawing, and so too, with Anya Gallaccio’s, Stroked, an entire wall painted in rich brown chocolate. Stroked is the antecedent to Couverture (1994), another site-specific installation: a chocolate-coated cell located deep in the basement of the Filiale Gallery in Basel. These lushly painted but pictorially stark environments seem to participate in the current critique of minimalism being promulgated by such artists as Antoni and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Gonzalez-Torres is known for his candy sculptures, including a forty-pound spill of Baci candies. “Baci” is Italian for “kisses.”  The silvery wrappers invest the steely serenity of minimalism with an uncharacteristically sweet appetite, affectionate disposition, and (given that the candies are there to be taken) accessible distribution. However, Gallaccio, who like Ruscha has also worked with flowers, maintains that her interest lies less in a critique than a direct involvement with materials, a process that she characterizes as collaboration.[footnote=37] And so her chocolate wall may be regarded as a voluptuous, sensual skin, ready to envelop the viewer in the rich perfume of chocolate and a mesmerizing haze of soft and buttery brushstrokes.

     

    IT’S A CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE WORLD

    And what a palace it was! It had one hundred rooms, and everything was made of either dark or light chocolate! The bricks were chocolate, and the cement holding them together was chocolate, and the windows were chocolate, and the walls and ceilings were made of chocolate, so were the carpets and the pictures and the furniture and the beds; and when you turned on the taps in the bathroom, hot chocolate came pouring out.

    Roald Dahl, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, 1964.[footnote=38]

    In the chocolate world—fragrant, nourishing, warm, and just repulsive enough to keep one feeling alive and on edge—what’s playing for music? There’s Charlotte Moorman’s cello “chocolate Easter music.” But if that’s too seasonal, spin a chocolate platter, pressed by Peter Lardong. Lardong is a former fork-lift operator who has sunk his life-savings into crack-pot inventions, such as an automatic talking catfood feeder and recordings done in beer and ice. Chocolate titles include In the Ghetto by Elvis Presley, Ich will keine Schokolade, ich will lieber einen Mann (“I don’t want Chocolate, I want a Man”), and the Babysitter Boogie. All are available from his own factory where they come with instructions to play them slightly chilled for best results. With Franco Götte’s chocolate dentures near at hand, eat chocolate until your teeth drop out of your head, supping at the table laden to capacity by Ultra Violet. The one-time member of Andy Warhol’s entourage and constant chocolate fan has arranged chocolate-coated goblets, utensils, plates, and—in a touch of surreality fit for Jean Cocteau’s Beauty and the Beast—chocolate roses and cigars. Feast your eyes on the chocolate Hall of Fame, whose ranks are represented by Franz Ziegler’s chocolate bust of Nefertiti, Susan and Ewald Notter’s Marilyn Monroe, and a bust of Swiss minimalist Olivier Mosset by confectionery artist Thomas Vaccaro.

    Or just gaze up into the glass eyes of Eric Magnuson’s giant Chocolate Moose (1995). For by this point, chocolate has thoroughly coated the tongue and even overtaken language, so that a trifling cup of mousse is transformed through some absurd slip into an almost incomprehensibly large chocolate trophy. So smitten, now, sink back into Peter Boynton’s Large Chocolate Syrup (1993) modeled after the classic modernist chaise lounge by Charles Eames, with the hard plastic seat upholstered in a thick coat of chocolate. It serves as a gentle reminder that chocolate is the antithesis to the modernists’ plan for streamlined reduction and lands one in the realm of unsublimated impulses and desires which cannot be suppressed by puritanical design.

     

    CHOCOLATE DELUGE

    In its physical resemblance to mud, the act of touching, molding, packing, and piling chocolate into shape harkens back to creation myths of imposing order on ooze. But the chocolate Kunstwollen veers from the basic to the base when its allusions turn from ooze to excrement. (This relationship is right there in the cooking—a recent surf through the Internet turned up recipes for chocolate desserts called Dirt and Doodoo Balls.) Like Karen Finley, the American performance artist Paul McCarthy slathers foodstuffs, such as chocolate, ketchup, and mayonnaise that resemble human fluids and waste, on his body during performances of such personae as the Pig Man and the Captain of the Death Ship. Beyond making a Freudian spectacle of regressive coprophilic behavior, these are the sights, sounds, and smells of apocalypse. The music that wells up out of the basin of Helen Chadwick’s chocolate fountain (Cacao, I994) is the antithesis of the tinkling play of water that soothes and quiets jangled nerves. It’s the shuddering, plopping, sound of smothering doom one hears on the brink of the La Brea Tar Pits. This may cast chocolate at its darkest, but even here morbidity slips into humor. The slumped pile of Claes Oldenburg’s Earthquake (1969) is a chocolate model for an (unrealized) amusement park ride that would send anxious revelers through the rumbling bowels of a chocolate Matterhorn.

    Cast, melted, or corroded into dust, chocolate seems capable of assuming endless sculptural forms, conceptual roles, and of conveying as many meanings within contemporary art. However, there is a commonality expressed throughout this history, and again, the key lies in the Chocolate Grinder, in whose depiction Duchamp experienced a certain freedom. He wrote, “Through the introduction of straight perspective and a very geometrical design of a definite grinding machine like this one, I felt definitely out of the cubist straightjacket.”[footnote=39] This sense of liberation combined with a “definite grinding” eroticism makes Duchamp’s machine emblematic of the very properties artists who use chocolate as a material have since enjoyed.

    By its organic nature, chocolate defies the notion of art as an eternal property. Images and objects rendered in chocolate perform in relation to the passage of time. Chocolate art does not stand still for the annals of history. Likewise, it resists falling into line with history’s traditionally formal concerns. For art conservators, who must determine to what extent these changes form part of a work’s intent, such action proves a delicate dilemma.[footnote=40] Perhaps the piece is supposed to fall away, like a life, into a state of irreparable ruin or death. Chocolate’s kinship with the body is further particularized by its unique physicality and nature. Capable of at once being sweet and cloying, irresistible and disgusting, delectable and wasteful, chocolate embodies the contradictions of the flesh. And it is the body, with all of its slippery complexities and mutable desires, which in turn serves as the conceptual point of focus around which to build a naturally nuanced, ever-changing and accommodating chocolate art history.

  • “Digging back into ‘Deep Storage’ and Deep Storage.” Deep Storage: Collecting, Storing, and Archiving in Art. Munich and New York: Prestel-Verlag and Siemens Kulturprogramm, 1998, pp. 10–21.

    Digging back into “Deep Storage”

    This project started as an essay by one author and evolved into an exhibition organized by five curators plus a battery of support. Now it is documented by a catalogue with essay contributions by fifteen authors. And still we cannot possibly presume to have wrapped up our topic: storage and archiving as imagery, metaphor or process in contemporary art. For at every turn DEEP STORAGE: Arsenale der Erinnerung falls subject to itself: a package overwhelmed by its own contents, which strains against the very processes of containment it seeks to represent. Beginning with the process of selection, for some the notion of storage conjures memory (things saved become souvenirs), for others history (things saved become information). And yet for others, storage is a provocative spectacle of material culture that hails the virtual as an ideal form of relief from the everyday problem of what to do with all this stuff. In short, the idea of storage cannot be easily contained. The arsenal threatens to explode, even before a single artist has been chosen.

    Rather than attempt to streamline, the topic here serves as an empty drawer or attic, a data-space, into which many diverse notions of storage have been delivered. Of course there were criteria. Every box needs walls. All of the works in this exhibition involve materials or processes associated with keeping art over time. These papers and packages conjure three sites: the storeroom/museum, the archive/library and the artist’s studio, an intersection of both. The studio is the place where art is not only made, but stored and documented. As the works in DEEP STORAGE seem to prepare themselves to be remembered or forgotten, one of the larger themes that emerges is the construction of history itself. This art raises questions about preservation, and produces some startlingly mundane and imaginative proofs of what history might actually consist of.

    The exhibition’s particular circumstances, organized as a German-American exchange, prompted a reflection on these points of national origin. Instituting Kunst Geschichte as a formal and philosophical discipline (not just an aristocratic act of connoisseurship), Germany is the cradle of art historical practice. America is the place where Conceptualism first turned documentation into a new art form. Here, a small group of historic works stretch the show’s play of images and ideas beyond the present to early modern models of storage and archiving. The main body of the show begins in the 1960s to focus on art of the 1990s, where several computer-based works extend the issues of DEEP STORAGE into the twenty-first century.

    The results will read like an assemblage. Unlike a thematic show whose elements all riff off and return to an encompassing framework, this one constantly refers outside itself. The following essay, for example, includes a number of important artists whose work is not represented in the exhibition. This suggests that storage is a potentially endless topic and allows that this curatorial project is by no means definitive.

     

    Deep Storage

    If the gallery is the museum’s public face, the storerooms are its private parts – the place where art is collated, concealed, and kept from view. Of the museum collection’s obscure bulk, only a tiny proportion ever makes it into the light of exhibition. To visit the storeroom, where objects dwell cut off from critical aura, is to contemplate art in a state’ of temporal remission. Paintings hang in row upon graceless row, on rack after regimented rack. Sculptures mill about like excess baggage. In that other great repository, the museum archive, dead documents lie in a state of suspended insignificance. Ironically, the storeroom stirs with signs of life. The skin of the unwrapped package, the spectacle of an unopened container or closed file can be an arousing suggestion of unknown possibilities, with contents made desirable precisely through their inaccessibility. When artists deploy this imagery the results are “deep storage”: work which both anticipates its own future condition and reflects on past, often accumulative, aspects of the artists’ visual practice.

    Precedents for this art, as with so many others, lie stowed in a suitcase. Marcel Duchamp casually dismissed his project of the Boîtes-en-valise as mere financial enterprise – “small business, I assure you”[footnote=1]– an attempt to drum up a little cash. More recent valuations acknowledge the Boîtes as the first critique of museum practice: it “parodies the museum as an enclosed space for displaying art…mocks [its] archival activity…[and] satirically suggests that the artist is a travelling salesman whose concerns are as promotional as they are aesthetic.”[footnote=2] But the project seems to have been more self-consciously motivated than either claim recognizes.

    It was 1938; the war was encroaching, and Duchamp’s art had already proved vulnerable to accident. The Large Glass was cracked in transit between Brooklyn and Katherine Dreier’s home in 1926, though this was not revealed until the crate was opened several years later. What better place to preserve the past than a museum? And so Duchamp devised one small enough to fit into a suitcase. He commissioned printers and light manufacturers throughout Paris to make 320 copies of miniature versions of each of his artworks, customized a briefcase to store and display them, hastily packed the rest of his bags and came to America.[footnote=3] The task of assembling and editioning the Valises stretched beyond Duchamp’s death in 1964. In the end the project was not only autobiographical, a life-long summation, but anticipatory as well. As an artwork designed to be unpacked, the viewing of the Valises carries the same sense of expectation and event as the opening of a crate.

    The crate is, of course, a carapace and a coffin. In an increasingly international art world, works are routinely sealed up into protective bins and cartons to be jetted off to exhibitions and salesrooms all over the world. Entering the collection or returned to the studio, they are consigned to storage in this same secreted state, sometimes never to be opened again. Over time, the crate supplants its contents as the object under consideration, the thing which is monitored, moved, and maintained.

    Accelerating this eventuality are Richard Artschwager’s recent crate sculptures: empty wooden boxes that deviate only slightly from true art shipping form. An unlikely corner, sly angle, or jog in the silhouette embody the gestalt of Artschwager’s furniture-like sculptures and, resting in their chamfered frames, his sculptural paintings. Collectively, these funereal objects transform the gallery into a crypt, subjecting the history of Artschwager’s achievements to the crudest form of encapsulation. They adjudicate the roughest assessment of art as so much cultural furniture.

    Haunting the storage spaces of galleries, museums and auction houses, Louise Lawler photographs the object-inmates as they move from racks and rooms, wheel past conservation studios, pause in corridors, wearily stand on view, step up to auction blocks and shuffle back into the storeroom. A dormant pall hangs over these transactions, making the bustle of the marketplace and the dynamism of history into equally mythic properties. To watch the digital counters affixed to Ashley Bickerton’s sculptures, set during the ago-go 1980s and ticking away the seconds of a presumably ever-increasing worth, today seems only wistful.

    The sense of loss which is intrinsic to these critiques depends on a consensus on what’s at stake. (You cannot mourn what you don’t care for.) To this extent, the crate becomes a figurative presence. René Magritte made light of this potential in his pastiches of David’s Madame de Recamier and Manet’s Le Balcon, in which the subjects of the original paintings are encrypted into craftily customized coffins. Artschwager’s self-reflexive crates confront the viewer with the immediate presence of totems. With their plain pine facades, they recall something Magritte once wrote about trees:

    “Pushed from the earth toward the sun, a tree is an image of certain happiness. To perceive this image, we must be immobile like a tree. When we are moving, it is the tree that becomes a spectator. It is witness, equally, in the shape of chairs, tables and doors to the more or less agitated spectacle of our life. The tree having become a coffin, disappears into the earth. And it is transformed into fire, it vanishes into air.”[footnote=4]

    Marcel Broodthaers brings this imagery of identification to its most intimate disclosure, writing of a “deep storage”-style installation he created for his own Musée d’Art Moderne, Département des Aigles, Section XIXème Siècle, located in his Brussels apartment: “My crates are empty. We are on the brink of the abyss. Proof: when I’m not here, there’s nobody.”[footnote=5]

    Other artists seem more resigned to the ephemeral nature of representation. Rirkrit Tiravanija, for example, makes works as temporal as campsites. For one installation, he moved the contents of 303 gallery’s store room out into its exhibition space. In the now-emptied back room, he set up a small stove to cook and serve meals to itinerant gallery-goers. During his absences, dishes and pans indicated the artist’s imminent return. In the meantime, the space afforded by Untitled (Free) (1992) generously envisioned a world without storage problems.

    In many cases, the storage of fine art has become practically an art in its own right: crates and conservation measures sometimes seem more elaborate than the very works they are designed to protect. Captivated by its symbols, labels, and materials, as well as the mysterious forms it engenders, Martin Kippenberger has cultivated the beauty of fine arts handling. It’s a far-ranging aesthetic. Bins of the artist’s own canvases, shown as if jettisoned from the warehouse, are as romantic as ruined temples. The crates Kippenberger exhibits alongside his sculptures are so intricately absurd that, in the manner of the best gothic art, they defy common sense. Striped cardboard boxes exhibited like Donald Judd wall-sculptures are smooth minimalist icons. And a series of mummified works, wrapped in Kippenberger’s own customized packing tape, becomes archeological treasure, mysterious fetishes of some marginal sect.

    Taking this Egyptian preoccupation one step further, Jason Rhoades fashioned an entire installation of his artworks and possession as if entombed in a suburban family garage. While Kippenberger elevates wrappers to the status of artworks, Rhoades intimates that it’s all – art and sepulcher alike – so much trash. With Suitcase with Past Financial Endeavors (1993), a shabby version of Duchamp’s Valise, Rhoades conjures up a comic image in which the suitcase takes advantage of the first-class luxury of the contemporary art circuit. Packed meticulously by professional handlers, fawned over by devoted registrars, expensively insured and gingerly installed like a relic in a vitrine, this slacker suitcase filled with rolls of cellophane tape, magic markers, balled-up aluminum foil, chocolate “shitty pops” and vials of “wee-wee” will travel from gallery, to museum, to collection, taking an occasional time-out to relax in climate-controlled store rooms, a Beverly Hillbilly come to high-culture.[footnote=6]

    Occasionally an artist is invited to infiltrate the sanctum santorum. Museum exhibitions that feature artists as curators seem to have made their debut in 1970 with Andy Warhol’s “Raid the Icebox” at the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design.[footnote=7] David Bourdon describes Warhol’s tour of the vaults:

    Warhol wanted the entire shoe collection. Did he mean the cabinet as well? “Oh yes, just like that.” But what about the doors? Would he allow people to open and close them? “Spectator participation,” Warhol murmured… One of the biggest surprises for Warhol was finding one of his own works…sharing a rack with two Charles Hawthornes and one Zoltan Sepeschy. “Doesn’t it make you sad to see all these forgotten artists?” Robbins asked Warhol. “…uh…”[footnote=8]

    A work’s fate once it leaves the studio domain can prove the source of some anxiety. Contemplating the unknown, Franz Erhard Walther took precautions against the possible mishandling of his First Work Series (1963-69). This multi-faceted sculpture consists of a suite of “before” drawings, the realized fabric sculptures, “after” photographs documenting these in performative use, and a sturdy shelving-unit for storing the entire ensemble. Altogether the piece serves as both museum and archive: a pragmatic minimalist structure that attempts to control its own physical and interpretive destinies. On a similar hermetic note are On Kawara’s date paintings, which come housed in their own cardboard boxes. Inside the lid of each box is affixed a newspaper page for the day in question situating the day’s work in a world of external events.

    Reifying a stored work’s existence through a paper-trail of photographs, sales records, loan forms, and letters is the archive. The archive was also Walter Benjamin’s great unfinished project: an attempt to organize the tidal waves of an ensuing modernity into a cohesive architecture of information and imagery. The inherent futility of this attempt, as each fragile structure slips beneath the crushing weight of the next oncoming wave, makes for an appropriately unstable paradigm in an age of mechanical reproduction that is itself giving way to the juggernaut of the information superhighway.

    For artists working from mediated imagery, as opposed to first-hand experience, archives are invaluable studio references. Eugène Atget, whose work was once primarily purchased by other artists and engravers as reference tools, referred to himself not as a photographer, but as an archivist. (Duchamp decided to give up painting to become a freelance librarian at the Bibliothèque Sainte-Genevèive in Paris.)[footnote=9] Among Joseph Cornell’s papers are neatly titled dossiers – whose subjects include “Claire Bloom,” “Clouds,” “Patty Duke,” “Peter Engels,” “Marilyn Monroe” and “Photography” – which he referred to and culled from for his collage. Likewise, Karen Kilimnik collects information on everything from “Andy Warhol” to “Waterbabies” as possible fodder for her scatter-style, collage drawings and installations. For both artists, personal obsessions sustain collecting impulses that give way to assemblage by way of the archive. For the collaborative team of Kate Ericson and Mel Ziegler, whose perfume Etês-vous servi? (1992) reproduces the scent of the National Archives in Paris, the repository is its own obsession.

    Working in an undefined interstice between archivist and artist, collector and curator, Douglas Blau maintains a vast accumulation of film stills, postcards, photographs, and magazine clippings, for use in his picture shows: installations of cycles of uniformly framed images lined up in neat rows on the wall. This format results in a deceptively simple narrative. It’s easy enough to read one image at a time (in both pictures someone is holding a book), or in a sweeping panoramic view (moving from pictures of individuals to pictures of groups). But it would be as impossible to reconstruct this idiosyncratic flow of information entirely as it would be to reconstruct a given film frame by frame, or a painting brush-stroke by brush-stroke. Thrown back on the curatorial project as a whole, Blau’s selections suggest that every exhibition should, to some degree, be read as a fiction that reflects an author’s predilections and is composed of what’s at hand and what someone remembered to dig out of storage.

    Sometimes the collecting impulse overwhelms the archival process. Instead of throwing things away, Warhol crammed his unopened mail and other casually-acquired ephemera into cardboard boxes, which he stowed in his home and studio. Currently being opened and catalogued at The Andy Warhol Museum, the Time Capsules’ contents would seem a historian’s dream – a post-marked paper backdrop to the famous artist’s daily life. Except that the staggering volume of the capsules reveals Warhol’s revenge, drowning the speculator in details of little or no importance.

    The artist’s life is a grand archive, in which every discarded receipt, marginal note, or studio scrap might some day be deemed tremendously significant. Besides Warhol, consider the Robert Mapplethorpe and Jackson Pollock/Lee Krasner Foundations, dedicated to compounding interest in their subjects daily through the availability and upkeep of archives. These archives spawn those other great testaments of worth, catalogues raisonnés, such as the giant tome just published in conjunction with the Bruce Nauman exhibition. Jockeying for control of the raw material are institutions like The Getty, which offers to pay living artists large sums of money for their dead papers. While these activities maintain and minister to a flourishing art market, with studios run like small businesses in the larger economy, the resultant accumulations of documents are also telling memory banks, demonstrating the ways in which historic figures are valued.

    The issue looms measurably in Meg Cranston’s Who’s Who by Size, University of California Sample (1993). These blank stelae portray the relative importance of a panoply of cultural figures, from Emily Dickinson to Mohammed Ali, according to the number of inches of shelf space they occupy within the stacks of the library at the University of California. With individual merit counting for little – Nikola Tesla is dwarfed by Thomas Edison, despite his substantial contribution to engineering – it’s the adage of the art review come true: when it comes to securing a place in history, perhaps it’s not so much what gets written as the number of inches racked up in print.

    When Sarah Seager approached the Smithsonian Institute’s Archives of American Art with Excuse My Dust (1992-93), she implicitly challenged the archival system of inclusion. Her donation of found correspondence written or received by the former archivist of the Huntington Library, was subtitled, Why do we circulate all these papers when everyone says it will make no difference? It tells of “…the archivist’s coming to terms with his wife’s nearly fatal bout of pneumonia” and in itself, serves no more or less a purpose than documenting a fragment of a facet of a otherwise untold story. However, housed in the Archives of American Art under “The Sarah Seager Papers”, they speak of a historical process that only selectively chooses its evidence from a vast arena of information, while the rest falls away into an ocean of insignificance.[footnote=10]

    Anxiety and dust provoke the archiving impulse. In the museum – the mausoleum most artists still aim to enter through their work – the recesses of the storeroom simultaneously beckon and bar access to history. Art that assumes the storeroom’s cladding and demeanor displays a desire to repose within the museum’s collection. At the same time, these works also elude the museum’s authority by inventing alternative systems of self-containment outside its ordination. These systems might be seen as individual struggles against time, or as simply autobiographical.

    The process of storing is always one of mirroring and self-evaluation. Whether that self is a cultural body, squirrelish individual, or Citizen Kane, “you are what you keep.” When these dual modes of internal and external assessment intersect in an art of impenetrable closure or inexhaustible accumulation, they attain an ongoing afterlife within deep storage.

  • “FRP: An Induction.” Beverly Semmes: The Feminist Responsibility Project. Glassboro, New Jersey: Rowan University Art Gallery, 2011, pp. 5-6.

    FRP: An Induction

    What is the Feminist Responsibility Project? And why is Beverly Semmes in charge of it? By the time Semmes emerged as an artist, the first wave of Feminism had already subsided, transformed from a political form of activism to a cultural form of reference. Semmes is part of a generation who made their mark during the early 1990s with a Feminist take on Minimalist art of the 1960s. Think of the monumental, monochromatic, mostly metal, always hard monoliths of such artists as Donald Judd, Carl Andre, and Richard Serra. Now apply fabric, fashion, the body, craft, appetite, desire, excess, because that’s exactly what Semmes—along with such peers as Janine Antoni, Polly Apfelbaum, Kiki Smith, Jessica Stockholder—seemed to be making sculpture with, for, and about.

    For instance Semmes’s Red Dress, 1992, now in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. As big as the wall, and attached to it by a hanger, this gargantuan velvet gown cascades to the floor, where it pools and pushes us out of the way like a coming tide, a red tide. Get it? The metaphors and imagery of Beverly Semmes’s art typically flow in this direction: from the female body and out into the landscape. Dresses are to be seen as vessels, as Semmes’s pots made of out glass and clay demonstrate. Like cartoon images of “making a pot,” these sculptural objects are gruntingly physical embodiments of the touch, the craft, the pleasure, and work that goes into building even the most elemental of forms. Whether it’s pots or dresses, Semmes’s works are environmental in sensibility and scale, billowing, icy, earthy, aqueous, or luminous, depending on material and color, which are always superabundant and sensational.

    There is also a performance aspect to Semmes’s work. The dress sculptures can appear as costumes, worn by gallery attendants as part of an exhibition, or by models in Semmes’s photographs and videos. The latter are usually family members and friends. (Getting people you care about involved with your work is always important.) Semmes too performs on occasion. She sometimes dons wig and sunglasses to deliver a talk, or, even, while working. As an artist-in-residence at Pilchuk Glass School, Semmes must have struck a glamorous note, hanging around the glory hole (as the firey center of the foundry is called) in a patently 70s get up.

    The seventies was, of course, also the heyday of Feminism, which brings us back around to the original question. The Feminist Responsibility Project—or, to use the artist’s acronym, FRP—makes its debut here at Rowan College in the form of a gallery installation with video, sculpture, photography, and two performers. The immediate impression is of a set-up so highly stylized and strange that is must stand for something. But what? The floor is covered in a foamy sea of white chiffon fabric, in the midst of which two women in voluminous gowns sit on chairs, facing one another. One woman’s gown is striped, the other’s a kind of canine camouflage, all-over-dog print. As identified by their attire and other insignia, the women are characters, the “Puritan” and “Super Bitch.” They are doing a picture puzzle, spread out on a table between them. Beside each woman a plastic dog sits like a sentry. Overhead hangs a beautiful chandelier, handcrafted of clear molten clay; it is lusciously globular.

    There are pictures on the walls. A projection covers one (like Warholian wallpaper, a picture that moves) with a video of a woman’s feet, kicking a potato over a frozen lake. The potato, painted pink, messes the ice and makes a dull thudding noise that fills the gallery space. On the other walls hang a series of pictures that come straight from the core of Beverly Semmes’s Feminist Responsibility Project.

    Over the past eight years and shown for the first time in this exhibition, Semmes has been diligently collecting and correcting images from what she refers to as “gentlemen’s magazines.” This is a ladylike (Semmes hails from the South with roots in Arkansas and Alabama) reference to her sources: vintage Hustler and Penthouse magazines, the pornography of which she has masked with strategic coats of paint. And if the five FRP works included at Rowan are anything to judge by, this project is much less straightforward than it may sound. For one thing, despite Semmes’s “corrections” it’s completely obvious that we are being confronted with shots of classic American porn. Splayed, spread, sucking on things, the women are more masked than concealed by paint-jobs that only amplify their objectification. Now things get tricky and funny, too, since the female objects on view are now simultaneously crude consumer objects of male desire and highly crafted feminist works of art. Focus on the painted parts and you see these silhouettes, the scale and shapes of which look a lot like Semmes’s sculptures: tactile, over-sized, sensual, scatological, enveloping, grotesque, humorous, basic. If you grabbed any one of these painted forms and set it on the floor, you would see one of Semmes’s pots or dresses. Masked in color, all of Semmes’s forms specify the body as something elemental with a hole in the center.

    The provocation of the hole lies at the center of the FRP installation. Note that the female attendants sit inside an erogenous “O” of fabric on the floor. (And of course, in porno-parlance, women are just holes.) So what is the puzzle that the Bitch and the Super Puritan are piecing together? It’s an FRP image that Semmes sent to a company in Germany that will turn any picture into a jigsaw puzzle. Speaking of puzzles, now seems like a good moment to introduce some of Beverly Semmes’s own notes about her installation. The use of fabric and craft, she writes, are intended to reference first wave Feminist art practices with their infusion into the mainstream of women’s work and decoration. The potato-kicking feet are flat-footed Freudian phallic symbols. Doing puzzles together is a favorite way of passing time with her mother.

    Like any sacred ceremony or mystery play, Semmes’s installation—with its fetish objects, icons, and acolytes—looks just sanctimonious and serious enough as to appear a little ridiculous to those of us who stand outside of it. Is this how Feminism looks today? Would only a bitch or a prig challenge the common wisdom that women have achieved equal opportunity as well as control over their own bodies? Has anyone been paying attention to Congress’s gambit to slash support of Planned Parenthood? Or, on a lighter note, has anyone read Tina Fey? The most successful woman in comedy has been writing about her experiences coming up with the guys who dominate her profession. From an essay in The New Yorker, here is one of Fey’s more pithy observations: “I have a suspicion—and hear me out, because this is a rough one—that the definition of ‘crazy’ in show business is a woman who keeps talking after no one wants to fuck her anymore.” Caustic, funny, fearless, I love this quote: it’s the Feminist Responsibility Project at work.

    Taken as a whole, Beverly Semmes’s FRP is a kind of camp. It disrupts the normal flow of pornography by strategically amplifying the awkward and obvious construction of the pose, the gaze, the exploitation, and the bodies that make it work. And it calls to order Feminism, along with social issues and political responsibilities that, in so-called Post-feminist culture, we may not care to embrace. Beverly Semmes’ FRP shows us that Feminism retains the super bitchy, pure crazy power to prove that we are no way near finished with the project.

  • “Douglas Blau’s Pictures: An Essay in Three Parts.” Douglas Blau. Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, 2008, pp. 10-28.

    DOUGLAS BLAU’S PICTURES: AN ESSAY IN THREE PARTS

     

    View-Master

    When floating on an open sea, out of sight of sand, or in a desert plain without compass or guiding hand, one comes to know the need for reins and for the mannered things of man.

    -Robert Béton

    When we last heard from Richard Archer, he was in the Painted Desert, driving a rental car that he had picked up in Los Angeles, and headed north. He planned to stopover at the Great Salt Lake to check out the Spiral Jetty. Would the recent news he had heard of the artist Robert Smithson’s death in an airplane crash have made the eccentric mound, jutting into the strangely pink inland sea, appear all the more otherworldly? Archer’s ultimate destination was just outside Portland in Beaverton, Oregon, home of View-Master. There he intended to immerse himself in the company’s archive of picture reels. Going back to the 1939 New York World’s Fair, the View-Master stereopticon system was first introduced as an alternative to postcards. Each reel contains seven glorious 3-D Kodachrome images of subjects, ranging from the scenic to the fantastic—from Carlsbad Caverns to Disneyland to Saturn. When viewed through a device that resembles a pair of tourist binoculars, images appear suspended in time and cupped in silence, impossibly distant yet miniaturistically detailed. It is a virtual reality, the View-Master’s view, and one imagines Archer’s plunge into the archives as an almost dangerously deep departure into picture worlds. Pure speculation, of course, since there is no evidence Archer reached either the earthwork or the archive. Or that he even made it out of the desert. This was in June 1974 just months after Archer had emerged from seclusion so deep that even his closest friends presumed him dead. (The writer J.G. Ballard assumed that he had “hitched a ride on an alien spacecraft and was heading toward some distant star.”) “Can’t say I was too pleased that no one wrote up an obituary on me,” Archer joked with Reyner and Mary Banham, the recipients of his letters from America. The first, dated May 13th, tells of inaugurating the trip with an itinerary tribute to Reyner’s celebratory book about Los Angeles: “following your leads as if L.A. were Baedeker.” Archer’s reference to the classic European Grand Tour guidebooks also tips a nod to the “mock tribute” that Banham himself paid in the film documentary Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles. The British architectural historian bombs around the city of angels in a rental car equipped with a “BAEDE-KAR visitor guidance system.” “It is a fiction,” Banham informs his viewers. He’s speaking not of the freeways, which were apparently empty ribbons back in 1972, but of the mellifluous female voice that today every rental car with GPS-navigation features comes equipped with.

    And so are Richard Archer’s letters: a fiction, that is, by Douglas Blau. They are a fiction he created as a catalogue text for the artist Vija Celmins’ 1992 retrospective at the Institute of Contemporary Art, at the University of Pennsylvania (making this current exhibition the second presentation of Blau’s work by ICA).[footnote=1] Titled “Solid Air,” the fiction frames a small graphite drawing by Celmins that Archer allegedly acquired. It depicts the surface of the ocean. To the Banhams, he describes the drawing’s “near-photographic precision,” belied by traces of a “rigorous dedicated hand.”  He calls the drawing “description as inscription” and carries it, like a text or talisman, on his trip to the desert, marveling “that I can hold the ocean in my hands.” Archer’s letters end with an ecstatic image of himself, in mock Saint Simon mode, a hermit atop a ruined Doric column: “No doubt someone will eventually find me, staring at the stars, my View-Master in one hand, the Celmins in the other.” Incidentally, an “assortment of psychedelics” was also packed for the trip.

    So who was Richard Archer? Not much has been published about him, but one gleans from his writings (and the occasional byline) that he was an American born in 1937, living in London since at least the 1960s. There he became associated with the Independent Group of artists, architects and writers. Informally led by Banham, they were taking modernism to a new high, by assimilating the low—images, objects, and aspirations of popular culture—within their work. It was Archer’s passion for movies, for film and cinema culture—picture shows and picture palaces—that seems to most clearly define a body of work that otherwise eludes categorization. An early essay reads like a film shot through a car window, with each view described in such transporting detail there are blurs of motion around the words’ edges. Traveling fast, yet going nowhere, the piece ends where it began with the author Archer sitting motionless behind the wheel.

    Turning to stills, Archer wrote a series of essays based on images from contemporary art, including—not surprisingly given Douglas Blau’s fiction—one about the work of Vija Celmins. It was in fact a pair of her paintings, based on newspaper photographs, of massive military planes suspended in flight. The two pictures appear alongside a concise description by Archer of a moment spent in perfect concentration, of time standing still. So intensely do pictures and text correspond, one might fail to notice that neither Celmins, nor her art, are mentioned anywhere on the page. The same is true of Richard Artschwager, Malcolm Morley, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol, and the various other artists, whose photo-based paintings Archer literally reproduces in print. Rendering each equivalent and illustrative of the other, these singular essays inform and form the very act of looking.

    No art accompanies Archer’s most original piece of writing. Just two empty frames—one vertical, one horizontal—appear as placeholders for every picture conceivable, which is exactly what the text contains. Published in the October 1969 issue of New Worlds, Archer’s “Wonders of the World: or How to Build a Universe” takes us traveling in quest of images. Prom flea market stalls, to library stacks, to supermarket shelves (once stocked with pulp encyclopedias), we follow our guide, who holds up picture after picture to view. Postcards, film stills, newspaper photographs, bookplates and magazine clippings, accrue into another sort of Baedeker’s guide, this time to a world of printed matter. Then suddenly, the narrative shifts from the cosmic to the specific. It ends with twelve pictures, described in sequence. As disparate as they are, curiously these twelve cohere, like the stones in a mosaic, or splices of film in a montage. They form a seamless totality that the writer Archer, with his seemingly infinite capacity for looking at pictures, drifts away into. A deep-sea diving expedition is the final image he describes, along with himself getting lost in its depths. And indeed, it was a couple years later in 1970 that Archer actually did disappear for a period of four years, only to briefly resurface in London then vanish again in the Painted Desert.

    Having come full circle, at what point was it clear that Richard Archer is himself a fiction? A character created by Douglas Blau?[footnote=2] Less evident may be the fact that Blau, the author, is also the self-portrait subject of Archer’s imaginary oeuvre. Simply put, as Blau writes of Archer, so might we read about Blau, albeit disguised as a figure from an earlier generation. Since the 1980s Blau, who was born in Los Angeles and lives in New York, has used words and pictures interchangeably to create a unique body of work. He emerged as a critic, but one whose texts only indirectly address the ostensible subject of his writing. An early book review, for instance, takes the appearance of the word “drifting” (on page nineteen of Achille Bonito Oliva’s The Italian Trans-avantgarde) to cut loose the assigned reading and embark on an appreciation of the 19th century travel writer Robert Béton, for whom the wonders of the world were only as interesting as the “driftings” they inspired.[footnote=3] In Béton’s highly pictorial prose, the anchor of his impressions remains submerged beneath the “craftily styled links” wrought in the depths of concentration.

    Blau posits Béton’s influence on Oscar Wilde, and the crafting of his infamous dictum in “The Critic as Artist”: “To the critic the work of art is simply a suggestion for a new work of his own.” It’s a moot historical point. Since Béton never existed—he is another of Blau’s fictions—Wilde could not have read him. (How like a fiction by Borges, who wrote extensive reviews of books that did not exist and then recommended these books most highly.) For Richard Archer, Béton’s precedence nevertheless remains apt. Both are similar characters. Visionary writers, their work, and the writing about them, gives fractal form to Blau’s art as a whole. His work is filled with metaphors of submersion and being swept away, with hallucinatory states of concentration, with frozen time, and descriptions made all the more vivid by references to perfume, taste and music, all of it induced by looking at pictures.

    During the 1980s and 1990s, Blau became known at large as an auteur curator, whose essays and exhibitions were instrumentally linked to a peer generation of Pictures artists. The name comes from one of post-modernism’s seminal exhibitions and texts, Douglas Crimp’s “Pictures” of 1977, which included the work of Troy Brauntuch, Jack Goldstein, and Sherrie Levine, among others.[footnote=4] The title came to more widely designate artists who were using found and appropriated pictures from all realms of culture (from advertising to movies to art) to make new images in all forms of media (from photography to painting to video). The recognizablity of the pictures, and of their sources, was key to this art’s critical reception. It seemed to suggest that pictures were empty signs, waiting to be filled, their meanings wholly dependent on the contexts of their reception. And that meaning was as mutable as the endless frames and contexts for images that artists constructed through their work. At least that was the general theory. In his championing of the Pictures artists, Douglas Blau took an opposite tack. He focused on painters who were using contemporary strategies to refer to the tradition of representational painting and its history in Western art. According to this tradition, pictures have had literal meanings for centuries, from preliterate periods, like the Medieval era, when churches could be read as bibles illustrated by frescoes, to modern times, when the complexities of individual existence and social being are made legible to us by icons of all kinds. For Blau, it seems that art’s object is to make the relationship between reading and looking, depiction and meaning, not just accessible, but completely engulfing.

    In 1987 he advanced this view with “Fictions: A Selection of Pictures from the 18th, 19th and 20th Centuries,” an exhibition that was installed in two New York galleries.[footnote=5] “Fictions” presented the work of contemporary artists such as John Bowman, Brauntuch, David Deutsch, Mark Innerst, Joan Nelson, Mark Tansey, and Michael Zwack, alongside historic paintings by Ralph Albert Blakelock, Thomas Cole, Hubert Robert, and Elihu Vedder, among others. Collectively these artists’ works expressed a visionary and romantic sensibility that Blau amplified with some explicitly eccentric inclusions, like a painting by Chesley Bonestell of Saturn from Its Moons, Iapetus, 1948 (a picture Richard Archer regrets was not the source for the View-Master reel of “Saturn and its Rings”[footnote=6]), a film still from Blade Runner, and a 19th-century photoengraving.[footnote=7] There were also a few photographs by Barbara Ess, Cindy Sherman and Edward Steichen, and a collotype by Thomas Eakins of The Gross Clinic (a study for the painting that Philadelphia just recently rallied to keep permanently in the city).[footnote=8] The catalogue expanded on this selection with a picture essay by Blau, followed by his own essay titled “Pictures.” About this essay, a profile of the writer C. E. Swaye (1899-1942), perhaps no more need be said here than to point out that Constance Swaye was a nom de plume of Douglas Blau’s during the mid-1980s.

    “Fictions” was the first in a series of exhibition projects to apply curatorial practice to the creation of explicit narratives or fictions, in which the catalogue was always integrally a part. It is through the essay titled “The Observer” that accompanied Blau’s 1990 exhibition “The Times, The Chronicle &The Observer” that the fiction of Richard Archer is first introduced. And it is Blau’s narrative of Archer’s writings that essentially serves as the curatorial text on the individual paintings in the show by Celmins, Artschwager, Richter and others, who comprise Archer’s own generation of Pictures artists.

    There gets to be something a little Twilight Zone in all these triangulations between actual subjects and artificial ones, between Blau’s representation of his work and the work itself, between fact and fiction. And it only gets more disorienting the deeper one delves.[footnote=9] Go back to the start of this essay and read the Robert Béton quote that opens “Solid Air (Richard Archer’s Letters on Vija Celmins)” to feel a little rush of the dizziness, like breathing inside a bell jar, at the exquisite self-containment of it all. Not that Blau ever lets the experiment go too far; he is too keen an observer for that. Indeed, in the essay “The Observer,” where he traces the development of Archer’s work, he anticipates a major shift that would occur in his own two years later.

    In 1992 Blau presented “The Naturalist Gathers ” first at a gallery in Los Angeles, then in a considerably expanded form, at a gallery in New York.[footnote=10] Composed entirely of found reproductions—postcards, film stills, newspaper photos, pictures from books and magazines—all hanging in inexpensive black frames of varying dimensions, it was a panoramic picture show. As if one of Blau’s picture essays had been translated into three-dimensions, the catalogue had become the exhibition. It was certainly an immersive experience, all those pictures, stacked approximately four frames high, and traveling, jostling cheek by jowl, in an unbroken band the entire perimeter of the space. The overall impression was oddly minimal, given all the imagery. It took but one closer look to get sucked into the intricate and slow-moving procession that viewing this installation entailed. The very first picture was Charles Willson Peale’s self-portrait The Artist in His Museum of 1822.[footnote=11] Another Philadelphia treasure, this painting depicts America’s first museum, with its mastodon skeleton, its gallery of cabinets (that turn the walls into a grid) full of specimens, and other curiosities, all assembled by Peale. Installed by Blau on a separate wall, this image sets the stage for what follows: hundreds of pictures of things being pointed to, or simply framed for us to look at.

    Echoes of Richard Archer, who in his essay “Wonders of the World,” could be Peale, pulling back the curtain on his wunderkammer: “…he was a guide leading the way through a labyrinth of stalls at flea markets, swapmeets, bazaars and museums; and, like a barker at a fair, he lured his audience in to take a peek, not at some oddity or poor contorted freak but at the ordinary world fixed in the form of countless ordinary pictures.” Likewise, Peale could be Blau. And Blau Archer, who with this, “one of his more curious pieces…alternatively entered into and stepped back from the fictions, as if he were trying to attain some new perspective on the larger picture.” But the more uncanny resemblance is yet to come. Two years after the publication of “Wonders” Archer disappeared. And so did Blau in 1997 virtually drop from view.

     

    PLAYTIME

    This is the first exhibition of new work by Douglas Blau in ten years. Sixteen works, all from this year, crystallize centuries of picture making into multifaceted new narratives. Like cinema or cartoons, these narratives unfold across sequences, strips and grids of uniformly framed images. Each frame is a collage cut and pasted from the world of printed matter, by now a familiar terrain of chromolithographs, halftones, photographs—in short, mechanical reproduction in all its forms. Besides glue, what holds these pictures together is the power of association. Correspondences between gestures, faces, colors, certain details, and entire images spark connections between fragments and between frames. As viewers, we are swept into the pleasurable activity of forging and following these links: formal and narrative chains of association that flow so seamlessly, we may lose sight of how ironclad they are. It only takes a step back, however, to register the precision (of details and references) and particularity (of tone, mood, color) of each composition. Every note is orchestrated.

    Now sit back and listen to Playtime. Fifteen frames installed in a horizontal (three by five) grid make this the largest of Blau’s new works. It is also the centerpiece of the installation. From a distance, the central frame in Playtime, surrounded by busier images, looks quiet and dark; it draws the eye immediately in. The darkness emanates from a late nineteenth-century interior, a gloomy room perked up by the flickering presence of two little girls in white pinafores. Or should I say, four little girls, since there are two identical versions of the same painting—Hide and Seek (1888) by the American Impressionist William Merritt Chase—overlapping inside the frame. This doubling puts pressure on the heavy curtain that one girl reaches to draw back, and thereby changes the picture from a children’s game to theater: the curtain is about to open. To see the play underway, turn to an adjacent frame, where a black-and-white film still offers a modern depiction of a night at the theater during the Gilded Age. This is the period in which all of the pictures in Playtime are set. An upholstered audience is watching a woman in a ruffled dress—she could be one of those little girls grown up—on stage with a man. What drama ensues? Drop down a frame, where another ruffled woman is embracing an indifferent looking man, in a sentimental picture postcard, captioned: “If forbidden sweets are sweetest, so are forbidden men most tempting.” The postcard is flanked by pictures of parlors, the perfect settings for intimate scenes.

    Books on the parlors’ shelves lead the eye into the next frame, where pictures of books in precious bindings (many look cut from the glossy pages of Arts and Crafts auction catalogues) surround an illustration of a woman in an artistic yellow gown. She sits before shelves of books with one volume open on her lap. She is not actually reading—she is a genteel woman after all—but absorbed in looking at pictures. (As am I, a woman looking at pictures.) This realization ripples, but does not distract my own attention from the regimented rows of books. Their spines lead, like sprockets in a reel of film, right into the next frame. Here is another woman, seated in private study, reading, in this case, The World newspaper. The world is a stage, of course, and there is a toy theater sitting on the table in front of her. (Along with a shoe, that prop or possession known to turn a woman’s world topsy-turvy.) The picture, a film still, directs us to an adjacent frame, where I actually recognize the actress Julie Christie, but cannot name the film this still is taken from. It’s an ongoing game, identifying pictures and people, movies and paintings, sources and references; but ultimately this is a trivial pursuit compared to the game of concentration Blau’s picture narratives enforce. Whoever Julie Christie was no longer signifies; the actress is now just one of the many women and girls dressed to play the female lead in Playtime.

    Seated at a desk, the woman looks up startled from something she is writing. Following the direction of her gaze, we can almost hear the voice of the man on the staircase in the next frame. Taken from another film, this picture is part of a montage, which turns an already oppressive staircase into a Piranesi-esque expression of twisted domesticity. He is not so much forbidden as forbidding, this man the woman rushes onto the landing to meet. The stairs lead down to the next frame, and into a great entrance hallway. The picture is accompanied by two others, one of servants listening at a door (perhaps to the master and milady having an argument in the front parlor), and one of a woman slipping papers into a desk drawer. Could the sound the servants hear be the rustling of her gown and papers as she hides the pages from view?

    We are now in the lower right hand corner of the grid, and from this point the eye wanders the perimeter. One frame contains newsprint and glossy reproductions of a historic theater interior with candy-box seats overlooking an empty stage. There are many scenes, or sceneries, of domestic interiors. There is another shot of the forbidding man; this time the stern patriarch seems to be terrorizing the children, those little Hide-and-Seek girls, who crop up again, and again, in two more reproductions of that first painting. This time, it’s the soft burgundy of the velvet curtain and brittle polish on the mahogany floor that resound. And echo with two pictures of empty stages and curtains in the next frame. After casting a backward glance to see if it’s the same candy-box theater—check!—the eye is caught by something in the opposite corner. A little girl is playing with a toy theater, arranging the paper characters on stage. We watch her reach through the curtain in a fusillade of reproductions—color and black-and-white—of some scene from film. And suddenly the eye catches him. Another picture, tucked in among the rest, shows a man reaching through the curtain. If there were music, it would strike a sinister chord.

    Does the picture end there? No, the repercussive themes of childhood play and adult drama continue to unfold as long as we keep looking at Playtime. Plus, since there is no fixed flow, the pictures are bound to lead each of us along different paths, constructing our own associations and variations on the overall narrative. The process of interpretation is thus not unlike a game of chess, in which the sequence of moves may change, but the board and the game remain set. We can scramble the arrangement of Blau’s pictures in our minds, but not on the walls, where their placement and meaning is fixed. This rule holds as true for individual works as it does the entire installation.

    Upon entering the gallery, the set up of the pieces strikes an immediate impression. Frames hang equidistantly in grids on the wall with expanses of empty space in between works. Some are in black frames; other works are framed in white. Like the keys of a piano, touched to strike a certain chord, the frames set the tone of the space. They ring especially clear in that corner of the gallery where the ceiling soars to double the height of the rest of the space. Six works in white frames fill this potentially crushing architectural volume with a sense of buoyant luminosity.

     

    ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST

    The installation commences with three works in black frames: The Course of Empire: Twilight (The Ambassadors), The Academy by Gaslight (Sculpture Hall Scene), and Public Gardens (The General’s Daughter). In the first, pictures of men in the urban metropolis at the turn of the century correspond with references to artist Thomas Cole’s The Course of Empire (a series of paintings done around 1835 of the rise and fall of an imaginary city[footnote=12]) and author Henry James’s The Ambassadors (a dark, comic novel of 1903, featuring a middle-aged protagonist as one of several “ambassadors” dispatched to retrieve an errant son).[footnote=13] Twilight time imbues the empyrean with a sense of coming darkness, or end. Even without these references, the work functions as an establishing shot, locating us in the same period as James’s trans-Atlantic literature, in which European old and American new worlds intersected. And so might we find ourselves in London or New York, Paris or Chicago, Vienna or Washington conveyed by the next two works, through museums and parks, where portraits of young women begin to develop into characters, or show different aspects of the same girl, in different episodes of a fiction that is unfurling. For that’s what is occurring.

    Just as each frame contributes to Playtime, so does each work in this exhibition read as a chapter, character study, essay or aside, within a grand narrative. And indeed, like a modern novel, it experiments with many forms of depiction, modes of representation and states of abstraction. Upon turning the corner of the gallery, the frames shift from black to white, and so do the pictures turn from worldly and prosaic to dreamy and diffusive. Take (Dance of the) Dragonflies, for instance. Framed in white, this work takes us out of the public gardens, and out into the woods and meadows, where women in draperies dance among dragonflies. Poster subjects of art nouveau, these pictures float away on a palette of wisteria blues and purples. One row of frames literally breaks from the grid. Hanging just slightly apart from the rest, two women join in an erotic caress.

    Moving on, the difference between black and white frames becomes gray. Maybe it’s not the contents, but the materials that set the tone. For what could be dreamier than The Conditions of Music, a picture framed in black? A languorous woman, played in part by Sarah Bernhardt in Orientalist drag, takes tinctures from a mauve vial. The work is named after an assertion by the British aesthete and academic Walter Pater, who wrote in his 1877 essay on the Renaissance painter Giorgione: “All art constantly aspires towards the conditions of music.” For Pater music held supreme because it delighted the senses by obliterating the distinction between matter and form. At the same time, music captivates the intellect by always approaching, but never giving figure to, depiction. Blau aspires toward the same by composing fictions without words that can also be read as paintings. Each piece of printed matter is a daub of color in a palette made up of myriad tones of ink on paper. From across the gallery, Blau’s assemblages might be seen to embody, in Pater’s words, “no more definite message for us than an accidental play of sunlight and shadow for a few moments on the wall or floor…caught as the colours are in Eastern carpet, but dealt with more subtly and exquisitely than by nature itself.”[footnote=14] Into such sensual strains, the color of the frames—black or white—submits to the over conditions of making pictures, in which narrative falls in and out of the focus and foreground of aesthetic experience.

    Based on collage, the structure of Blau’s narratives is fragmentary and familiar. The Age of Paper (Follies of the Day) shows the city at the dawn of the twentieth century, papered in printed matter. Advertisements, posters, broadsides, newspapers, on buildings, buses, theaters, this is the landscape Cubists, Constructivists, and Surrealists alike rendered into collage on paper and montage in film. Conflating the two, Blau cuts and pastes paper into films made of stills. His frames are filled with dynamic cuts and sequences that both condense and advance the work’s many narratives. Splicing, zoom-ins, fade-outs, double exposures, triple exposures, and other cinematic effects make these pictures pulse with movement, movement that is further syncopated in the line up of frames into uniform grids on the wall.

    At this point it seems useful to know that after receiving degrees in art and art history, Douglas Blau studied cinema. Perhaps nowhere in this exhibition is his love of film and its structures more succinctly expressed than in Archer (Targets). Dominated by stills from a scene in The Age of Innocence, director Martin Scorsese’s 1993 period film, based on the 1920 novel by Edith Wharton (Henry James’s great protégé and friend), set in the Gilded Age, it features Winona Ryder as May Welland playing archery with her friends. In Blau’s adaptation, which could as well be titled, “Richard Archer (Jasper Johns),” the modern day Diana takes aim and is the target. A razor’s slice to her sightline cuts to the quick Johns’s famous claim that he painted targets because they were “things that are seen but not looked at.” In Blau’s work, targets are there to be both looked at and seen—in every picture frame.

    Every fiction has its arch. Starting around 1880 in the Edwardian era and spanning the next thirty years, the narrative of this exhibition has led us through a labyrinth of bourgeois life at the turn of the century. As experienced through the main characters, all of them women, this reality is extremely circumscribed. When, in That Song about the Midway-Day, the girl makes her big foray into the risqué carnival zones of popular culture to see a puppet show, she sticks but a delicate toe into the world of the low.[footnote=15] Otherwise it’s a visit to the family business (Work [The Office]), an afternoon spent sketching in the conservatory (Watercolor [The Naturalist’s Granddaughter]), and days at the museums, parks, and crystal palaces, which distract. The crux of the drama occurs indoors and through states of interiority—dreams, abandon, and reflection. The fiction ends as it began: in the company of men. The Conversation finds gentlemen sequestered in the library, taking refuge it seems from the twentieth century, which has just begun to dawn in the previous frames. The dynamism and clang of its industrial printing presses catalyze Douglas Blau’s picture narratives.

    The exhibition does include one other work, The Conversation Piece from 1993/1995.[footnote=16] It shows where he left off, so to speak, by representing the last time we saw Douglas Blau. He had developed his panoramic installations into more discrete works, based on the same materials and basic structure as The Naturalist Gathers.[footnote=17] The Conversation Piece is a triptych, each section a-jangle with those small black frames (installed according to a template Blau created especially for this purpose). The frames contain depictions of political dialogue in all its variety, from tête-à-têtes to the legislative body, throughout the ages. Given that by the time Blau’s exhibition closes at ICA, Americans will have elected a new president, the work is a timely and relevant choice.[footnote=18] It also serves as an index to the new work. Besides obvious differences, like the frames, the most significant change is Blau’s approach to narrative. Instead of assembling pictures to represent a subject across time, the new work renders subjects precisely drawn at a particular moment in history. This moment could as easily be represented by a contemporary movie still as by a contemporaneous work of art. (Blau admits to taking artistic license: when a picture just seems right, he will use it irregardless of representing a moment that’s a decade off, or so.) This new criteria suggests what he’s been up to all these years.

    For the past decade, Douglas Blau has been collecting pictures of all aspects of Western culture and organizing them along historic and thematic lines. He’s been operating on the hunch his work began to suggest, initially to Richard Archer, that the world of pictures is not endless. There exist but a finite number of narratives that are repeated historically over time. Only details and variations are infinite, as recombinative as DNA. In building on this premise, Blau’s studio has meanwhile been transformed into a picture archive such as his character Archer may have gotten lost in. But for Blau, the archive has reached the opposite capacity. Stocked with the makings of every picture possible, his archive now sends him back out into the world of picture making.

    Having arrived at the brink of the future of Douglas Blau’s art, it’s time to bring forward another figure from the past. No fiction, the German art historian Aby Warburg is already omnipresent in contemporary culture. His great, unfinished project the Atlas Mnemosyne was to be an iconographic picture atlas for the ages. Announced in 1927, Warburg worked incessantly on amassing picture material of all kinds, from postage stamps to newspaper photos to fine arts reproductions. Assembled according to a principle of “montage collision,” the plates of the atlas just kept growing in number. When Warburg died in Hamburg in 1929, the Atlas was left definitively unfinished. As a conceptual project, however, its legacy looms large. Christian Boltanski, Hanne Darboven, Walid Raad, and Gerhard Richter are among the many artists whose work, based on archives and archival processes, is anticipated by it.[footnote=19]

    Also, of course, Douglas Blau, with whom a comparison to Warburg yields more than just a penchant for picture archives. Both stand in curious relation to their respective disciplines. Blau is an artist who created the script for his own work as a writer. Warburg was an academic, who never published a book, but followed his interest in the nachleben or “afterlife” of classical antiquity to the American Southwest, to see the Hopi snake dancers and think about the marble sculpture of Laocoön and his sons writhing under the crushing weight of serpents.

    Critical of traditional notions of style, Warburg invented an alternative art history based on an iconography of gestures, movements, and other arrangements that can be seen to visually propel cultural expression from one moment to the next. This emphasis on motion gives the plates of his Atlas—in which pictures appear arranged in informal grids—a curiously cinematic effect. One of the most conspicuous gestures contained by the Atlas might be called the ecstasy of mechanical reproduction. Indeed, one might even observe that while previous generations of scholars relied almost exclusively on texts, Warburg’s vision was a response to a modern picture world exploding with printed matter and pictures his Atlas attempted, impossibly, to encapsulate.

    Less than one hundred years later, Douglas Blau’s work situates us at the opposite end of this spectrum. Digital media eclipses the world of printed matter Blau’s art is made from and depicts: a world dominated by Western culture and its narratives. In it, the roles of power, invention and authority have historically gone to white men, whose wives and daughters are at home dreaming and dabbling. Judging from Blau’s archive, there are plenty of pictures in store, and yet to come, of exotic adventures taken abroad, peeks into the lives of the working class and poor, servants and slaves, journeys into netherworlds and crime. However, in general, as the saying goes, to the victor go the spoils—and the power of stories, too. Blau’s pictures are cultural, not critical. How culture’s narratives will change as perspectives become increasingly global—and the West loses its hegemony—is a picture in formation. In the meantime, Blau’s work, poised to bookend Warburg’s Atlas of Memory, commemorates a history of the touch, look and tones of printed matter that new technology will soon make obsolete. At the same time, Blau’s project is also a paper analogue—a Baedeker’s Guide in frames—to the virtual world of the web where pictures can be streamed from exponentially escalating numbers of archives—both private and public—onto the screens that surround and engulf us in this new form of illumination. (I just downloaded “Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles” from UbuWeb Film.[footnote=20]) As Richard Archer once fictitiously dove and was lost in a sea—such as the Laocoön was actually dredged from—so in fact may we all be swept away in looking at pictures thin as air.

     

    The author would like to thank Geoffrey Batchen for his ever-insightful reading of her work, Ann Reynolds, Greg Dinkins, and Richard Torchia for fielding questions (on Spiral Jetty, View-Master, and Saint Simon, respectively), Thomas Devaney for mentioning Borges’ book reviews, and Paula Marincola for the lovely turn of phrase “auteur curator.”

  • Excerpt from “Lives Naturally in the World of Theatre + Illusion.” Karen Kilimnik. Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, pp. 29-107. Excerpt pp. 29-41.

    LIVES NATURALLY IN THE WORLD OF THEATRE + ILLUSION

     

    The Antichamber

    Antechambers are small rooms that conduct to larger rooms. They compress space to raise expectations of what lies beyond. How strange then to exit the antechamber only to enter the space of yet another small room, one that leads, more strangely still, into yet another antechamber? This is the particular provocation of a work by Karen Kilimnik, who once briefly studied architecture, in the course of becoming one of today’s most irreducible artistic figures. Since the early 1990s, Kilimnik has been known for portraying the icons of art, film, and fashion in works that draw correspondences between consumer culture and romantic tradition, and which bring a haunting and contrary sense of beauty to contemporary art. Even for those who know her work, this installation stands out for being so purely architectural. Imagine three different period rooms each richly and discretely appointed in wallpaper, wooden moldings, and a mantel or mirror. Each perfectly performs the role that antechambers have played throughout time immemorial of building a sense of architectural drama. Multiplied times three, the drama is further heightened by the oddly angled shapes of these interiors. Space does not so much flow as get pitched from room to room. Within these tight quarters, states of anxiety and suspense erupt from the insistent emptiness, charm, and repetition of these vexatious antechambers. Titled the Antichamber (2004)—note the anti-spelling—this installation ushers us into the oppositional realm of Karen Kilimnik’s art.

    This truly spectacular realm is displayed in “Karen Kilimnik,” the first major survey of her work. Occupying two floors of the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), the exhibition includes over one hundred objects borrowed from across America to represent more than twenty years of practice. It was selected and composed in dialog with Kilimnik, who typically approaches her exhibitions as a form of installation art. Here she specified that the first and largest gallery appear almost entirely empty. Works are actually hidden from view inside of a small, freestanding chamber, a new installation Kilimnik created especially for the exhibition titled the red room in the modern Architecture. The sheer volume of the surrounding space makes the gesture all the more defiant and confusing. (Try leading a tour into a gallery from which Karen Kilimnik’s first major museum survey seems to have vanished.) The conventions of curatorial practice have not been overruled by artistic intervention. Quite the contrary, both are rigorously implemented throughout an exhibition made up of four component installations, each with its own organizing premise.

    The gallery adjacent to the first, empty-looking one focuses on Kilimnik’s drawings and early sculptures. Long and narrow, it resembles a lost corridor of works on paper at the Louvre crossed with the hall at the end of the rabbit hole in Alice in Wonderland. On the center of the floor—as if in lieu of a bottle marked “Drink Me”—is a pile of pills, white powder, a razor, and other paraphernalia that make up the 1991 sculpture titled Drugs. On the second floor of the museum, the survey continues, or rather starts over again, with media-based works: photography, video, and printed matter. One gallery is a video lounge. Dark and glowing with the cool light of monitors, it contains some of the earliest works in the show. Hanging in a line, like the frames of a film, are eight of the “Me As” series of self-portrait photographs, in which the artist has used a heavy black marking pen to assume celebrity guises and alter her appearance. There is, for instance, Me as Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet Before Horse Race and Me with Contact Lenses (both 1988). Here is where you will also find a case of selected books and other printed matter designed by the artist, along with one of Kilimnik’s photo albums—the cheap store-bought kind that she has long been in the habit of filling with her snapshot photography.[footnote=1] The other upstairs gallery is Lincoln Center. Painted icy pale blue and trimmed in decorative moldings, it is a stage for one of the major themes in Kilimnik’s art—the imagery of the ballet—and features a video installation that takes the form of an architectural folly. This gallery alone tells the story of her art’s underlying ambition to achieve a full-scaled and theatrical form of production. Except that the ballet is just a single aspect of an oeuvre with many antechambers, any one of which can be experienced as a very large room.

    To enter the small white chamber that so aggressively occupies ICA’s first-floor gallery is to duck into a museum, albeit a miniature one, where another major survey of Karen Kilimnik’s art is taking place, in what appears to be the past tense. Red walls, hung salon style, are thick with pictures of every genre and subject: portraits, landscapes, still lifes, animals, religious and allegorical subjects, and, of course, the ballet. Most of the works are paintings, but there are drawings and photographs too. Many are ornately framed. Indeed, the whole space functions as a frame or tableau for the works on view. Decorative moldings—at chair and ceiling height—band the perimeter. Scrolling patterned wallpaper evokes a romantic era. An enormous round settee, upholstered in raspberry-colored velvet, occupies the floor.

    It is a temporary framework, like all exhibitions. When the ICA survey closes, and the works are returned to their respective public and private lenders, the red room in the modern Architecture will be dismantled, dematerialized. It was only conceived in response to the problem Kilimnik perceived in showing in a contemporary space to begin with. As she noted in our correspondence: “I got the idea because I thought it’s a pity to work so hard to change the modern building to look old and this way we can have both. You also have an approach, walking [across the empty white space] to the room. And I have always wanted to have paintings hung like you see in old paintings of salons from the eighteenth century.”[footnote=2] It’s a classic conundrum, which critic Brian O’Doherty theorized in his text Inside the White Cube. “Art exists in a kind of eternity of display, and though there is lots of ‘period’ (late modern), there is no time. This eternity gives the gallery a limbo-like status; one has to have died already to be there.”[footnote=3] In Kilimnik’s period room, art exists in a kind of eternity of taxidermy. The salon, O’Doherty writes, epitomizes what a gallery is: “a place with a wall, which is covered with a wall of pictures.”[footnote=4] But such a wall is “upsetting to the modern eye: masterpieces as wallpaper…the (to us) horrid concatenation of periods and styles…”[footnote=5] Even to postmodern eyes, which should presumably see its political and critical implications, Kilimnik’s red salon is curiously disturbing. It is the feminized space, the nonhierarchal display, the anxious architecture; it is the antidote, in short, to the white cube. And yet, at the same time this work absorbs, it also rebuffs such attempts at contextualization. Is it transgressive or ingenuous? This is perhaps the most radical aspect of Kilimnik’s art, its very destabilization of these terms.

    Scanning her work from the plush vantage of the settee, one is bound to experience a sense of déjà vu. Kilimnik is a copyist for whom the process of picture-making always begins with an act of quotation that turns into an act of possession. From publicity shots of Leonardo DiCaprio and Scarlett Johansson, and from paintings by Velázquez, Titian, and Reynolds, come some of the more famous images she has made her own. Sometimes it’s just a detail she’s after, which makes the original hard to identify. Not that Kilimnik is trying to hide anything; her art is friendlier than that. Its very style of depiction, dashing and bold, seems aimed at establishing the quickest means of identification between viewer and subject. Laying down just as many strokes as it takes to capture the essence of what she’s after, Kilimnik’s art is especially attuned to the pictorial economy and present-day popularity of Impressionism. On the wall is a copy after one of the historic movement’s American practitioners, who is also among its sweetest Stylists, street scene with Hansom Cab in the Forrest from Childe Hassam (2003). Nevertheless, there are many obscure and ephemeral points of reference, as Kilimnik is an avid consumer of media in all forms.

    She might be the quintessential postmodernist. All the signs and strategies are there: the concerted mix of culture high and low, the myriad mediums and allusive styles of depiction, the appropriation and fragmentation of images, the fugitive sense of history and identity. Kilimnik’s work displays the complete repertoire. However, to her credit, she calls these techniques into play without irony or detachment. Sidestepping all of the anticipated postmodern positions, Kilimnik’s art is disarmingly subjective—immersive, imaginative, opinionated, possessive. It simultaneously mediates and expresses those desires and emotions, which appear, like the imagery itself, to be left critically unresolved, full of mystery and aspiration.

    The red room in the modern Architecture is the Antichamber that introduced this essay. It is the period room that conducts the viewer into a quasi-historical and romantic past. And so does this exhibition—a grand statement composed of discrete compartments—seem to be made up of anterooms that do not lead to the expected larger room. This room could be postmodernism. It could be Romanticism. Both grant access to Kilimnik’s work. But her art resides significantly elsewhere. Adjacent and detached, it is its own antechamber, one that this essay proposes to inhabit by exploring the work’s themes and developments. Given the complexity and many intertwined aspects of her art, the lack of a basic narrative is a striking lacuna within what is now a very substantial exhibition and publication history. Before going into this history, however, another set of chambers beckons.

    To merely mention Edgar Allen Poe is to hear the tapping, “As of someone gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.” The narrator of “Berenice” is summoned by the sound of moaning to the antechamber outside his library where he finds “a servant maiden, all in tears, who told me Berenice—was no more.” Kilimnik has more than once referred to a penchant for Poe, whose Philadelphia home, now a museum, is like the Antichamber, composed of small rooms that lead into more small rooms—all of them empty. What better space in which to concentrate Poe’s imagination?[footnote=6] Calling his work gothic merely imparts the flavor, not the force that Baudelaire dubbed an “almost divine faculty,” for its ability to “immediately [perceive] everything: the secret and intimate connection between things, correspondences and analogies.” This is in essence the faculty of Karen Kilimnik’s art, which has also been called gothic in style. Framed by specific references across reams and streams of cultural matter, it brings us to an interior place of imaginative speculation and intense, sometimes divine, emotion—a place that is perhaps the antechamber of all art.

     

    What Do You Know About My Image Duplicator?

    An account of Karen Kilimnik’s formative years in Philadelphia reads as a tale of mystery and imagination. It begins with the question of when was she born?…

     

    The author would like to thank Geoffrey Batchen for his reading and Donna Ghelerter for her editing of this text.

  • “Found in Translation.” Jess: To and From the Printed Page. New York: Independent Curators International, 2007, pp. 15-72. Excerpt pp. 15-18. Copy

    FOUND IN TRANSLATION

    A Delightful Pamphlet

    “Got Wallace’s Art Forum (tore out everything else) and made a delightful Berman pamphlet,” reported Jess in January 1966.[footnote=1] He had just reduced that month’s Artforum magazine to a four-page booklet comprised only of the pages featuring Wallace Berman’s mystical Verifax collages. It is a small gesture, but one that speaks volumes about the San Francisco artist Jess and his work. On its face, it was a tribute to the success of a friend and fellow Californian with whose work Jess’s was identified.[footnote=2] That very month, an exhibition would open in London, where Berman and Jess, together with Bruce Conner and Lyn Foulkes, were presented as avatars of a new, American West Coast approach to collage.[footnote=3] Funky with the residue of not-so-distant pasts (the Victorian era, the Depression) and uncanny visions of the present (the psychedelic and occult), the California Assemblagists used the stuff of scrap yards and scrapbooks to make art that often looked ready to return to being found.[footnote=4] Tearing up magazines was basic practice, and collage a language in which they were all conversant. On the other hand, Jess’s gesture was also a tacit act of reproach. Not against Berman, but against the contemporary art world represented by Artforum’s other sixty-one pages of features, criticism, and advertisements that Jess had discarded. Apparently he didn’t consider the rest of the magazine worth cutting up for collage material. Even given Artforum’s West Coast origins (founded in San Francisco, it moved from Los Angeles to New York in 1967), the content simply wasn’t part of Jess’s picture.

    That said, Jess contributed significantly and imaginatively to the history of contemporary art. Born in 1923 in Long Beach, California, he turned to art and changed his name from Burgess Collins in the late 1940s. In the 1950s, using just a flick of the knife (and some glue), Jess subverted Dick Tracy comic strips into the series of Tricky Cad collages that became early icons of Pop art. During the 1960s, he transformed all manner of found black-and-white images into strangely gorgeous appropriation art in his series of paintings called Translations. Of the juxtaposition between these works’ illustrative imagery and lumpy molten surfaces, the poet John Ashbery wrote, “The neat, workmanlike transpositions ignore the anomalies of surface, as though a magic lantern slide were projected on a lunar landscape.”[footnote=5] During the 1970s, Jess achieved an ambitious new scale for collage, creating compositions—some measuring over six feet wide—that are as complex and clotted as they are whirling and baroque. Curator Michael Auping, the leading scholar on Jess’s art, sees in these grand-scale collages an “activated field of interlocked, free-associated images that vaguely resemble the painterly explosions and gestural coupling of action painting.”[footnote=6] They occupied Jess, who worked at an increasingly incremental pace, throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s.

    Jess’s art is book-ended by abstraction. As a student at the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute), he studied with some of California’s leading exponents of Abstract Expressionism, most significantly Clyfford Still. His move from painterly abstraction to collage was preceded by the emergence of pictorial and symbolic elements in his paintings.[footnote=7] Like Joseph Cornell, Jess worked from a studio archive, which he developed over years of collecting and clipping source material and filed according to subject.[footnote=8] He spoke of pulling images from the past into the present and working through a state of flux until the “collage takes over, it becomes the maker and I become the instrument.”[footnote=9] In the process, he attached hundreds of fragments to the support with pins, then stirred the composition like magma or energy, until it was resolved and ready to glue into place. He called the results “Paste-Ups,” a term he coined to set his art apart from Dada and Surrealist collage, which he felt an admiration for, but little affinity with.[footnote=10] Likewise, he called his assemblage objects ‘Assemblies.” Or, as if to kill any possible link with precedent or the California Assemblage scene, “Necro-facts.” The latter term also implied the redemptive angle of working with found images and forgotten materials, a small power that seems to have given Jess a great sense of purpose and pleasure. For one of his later series, Salvages, Jess recycled abandoned abstract paintings (his own old canvases and those found in his habitual trawling of junk stores) by inserting pictorial passages into the existing fields of brushwork. In “A Panic That Can Still Come Upon Me”: Salvages II, 1963-1972, isolated figures dot an abstracted landscape to create a sense of uncanny incident. While previously Jess had abandoned abstract imagery for pictorial representation, the Salvages give equal footing to the non sequitur narratives of dream (or myth) that appear to be taking shape and to the hazy matrixes that envelop them. Not only had his art come full circle; Jess had, in a way that seems truly American in its resourcefulness, invented an ingenious means of recuperating for a postmodern age the glorious pasts of both abstraction and easel painting, using this clever gizmo called collage.

    Despite these achievements, Jess’s reputation remains marginal. When he died in January 2004 at the age of eighty, his New York Times obituary called him “an artist whose idiosyncratic paintings and collages made him a cult figure in American art.”[footnote=11] Indeed, Jess’s following was limited, if devoted. So the question is: How might we access his work—which is so openly inviting—more fully? Consider once more Jess’s extractive gesture, this time not as a tribute to Berman but (to borrow Jess’s terminology) as an act of translation. Jess turned an art text into a literary one—for what is a pamphlet but a little book? Pay attention to the object at hand. A slim thing, it resembles a chapbook, the kind of volume once hawked by chapmen that contained such miscellany as a romance, a ballad, or the life story of a notorious criminal, an artist of the underground. It is by way of this rendition of Jess’s act that the “delightful Berman pamphlet” guides us in how Jess’s work might be most delightfully read: by focusing on its bookish aspects.

    This interpretive framework bumps directly into a certain modernist art-historical prejudice against the literary to find meaning in the marginal. It is an illuminative one for considering the paste-ups that Jess created specifically for publication or reproduction, which are central to this survey. Turning printed matter into material to be printed, Jess made many of his works in collaboration with poets, most significantly his partner, Robert Duncan, recipient of the tell-tale January 1966 letter. He also made extraordinary collage announcements and brochures for his own exhibitions, suggesting that he valued the chance to increase his art’s “readership” by disseminating his work in print. But it is not only the literary work that this bookish framework illuminates, it is Jess’s work overall. When art as idiosyncratic as Jess’s is looked at with an eye for books and poetry, words and literature, stories and translations, it comes into plain view.…

     

    The author would like to thank Chris Taylor for his accompaniment on so many of the journeys this Jess essay represents, and for his insights along the way.

  • “Accumulated Vision and Violence, Barry Le Va.” Accumulated Vision, Barry Le Va. Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, 2005, pp. 54-83.

    Accumulated Vision and Violence, Barry Le Va

    Plates of glass are dropped into the midst of felt piled on the floor. Whole bolts of this cloth are slumped in together with draped sheets, scattered squares, and strewn particles. The felt absorbs light while the glass sharpens it, glinting off the edges of shards and broken sheets. One feels simultaneously repelled by the substance and enveloped by the scale of this strange distribution. It is one of the earliest works in “Accumulated Vision, Barry Le Va,” a survey exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), University of Pennsylvania. Spanning forty years, to include drawings, photographs, texts, sculpture, and installations in a variety of mediums, the show fills both floors of the museum, as well as its ramp and mezzanine spaces. At the opposite end of the gallery containing the 1967 felt piece is a more recent work, from 1995. Black and lying low to the floor, it consists of a phalanx of geometric forms. Tabular disks and rectangles flank a bevy of small cylinders, cast from a concrete like substance. To one side of this group is another set of forms—symbolic and structural in shape—clad in an industrial rubber skin. Certainly more organized in appearance than the mess of felt and glass one encountered upon first entering the museum, this work is no more a self-contained entity than the other—nor is the history they represent one that can be recounted without stepping out of the contemporary mainstream that Le Va’s art has advanced and participates in. These works strike trajectories into realms of math and architecture. They delve into the pages of Ellery Queen’s pulp The French Powder Mystery and Paul Virilio’s philosophical Bunker Archeology. And, most profoundly, they deliver up for view some of the darkness of our own times.

    Let me return to the two works under consideration. One sprawls in all directions, the other clusters. Both command not only considerable floor space but also the nearby walls, ceiling, and all the empty spaces in between. Looking around, your eyes stumble across your own feet, planted next to the work of art, and realize that you, too, have been implicated, framed by this encounter. That is why it is essential to look around,to use your eyes and your mind, since your own body, its substance and proportion, perceptions and limits are part of the picture. From now on, you are the witness who has also been fingered as an accomplice. So, you must figure out what happened here, for something did occur. The clues are everywhere. (Upon considering the evidence, please remember that deduction is as much about adding things up as it is about taking things away.) You can see that each of the so-called sculptures is only a temporary arrangement. No sooner does this occur to you than you find yourself sweeping up the scattered materials and dismantling the component elements in your mind—trying to reconstruct how and why they landed as they did.

    It may be hard to imagine that these two works—one so gory and explicit, the other cryptic and refined—were even created by the same person. Except that each is marked by that telltale sign of all of Le Va’s work—an implied violence. And on this count, the titles are more indictments than clues. Continuous and Related Activities; Discontinued by the Act of Dropping relates its procedure so methodically that you can almost hear the sound of breaking glass, silencing the scissors that were systematically cutting the felt into sheets and strips and particles. The title Bunker Coagulation (Pushed from the Right) is relatively more coded in its disclosure. But so is the work the title describes, which might now put us in mind of military and bodily fortifications under pressure from one side. The little cylinders suddenly look downright corpuscular compared to the architectural masses that they are being squeezed out from in between. It is an image of internal and external defenses against assailants that are, thus far, unknowable abstractions. With relative degrees of opacity, then, both of these works are images of cause and effect that demonstrate a moment of impact. Under this force, one work appears to explode while the other implodes, both with incredible power. As we go more deeply into our investigation of Barry Le Va’s art, we will encounter such violence again and again. It is the invisible content—the thing that is happening—the thing that both generates and disrupts this extraordinarily concise and expansive body of work.

     

    Minor Cuts

    A metal-clasp envelope in the artist’s studio contains his earliest extant work: a sheaf of cartoon drawings. Framed in black ink, the abstract imagery is funky, figurative, and painful. “I WILL ERASE,” cries “the living eraser” as, with the touch of a button, it removes a trestle from a bridge. “MINOR CUTS!” declares a hirsute man in the midst of scenes of institutional torture, involving straps, electrodes, hot coffee, and an amputation. “OUCH” goes the head with a straw hole poked in the side of it, while the “Snow Removal” service pulls out of the picture. Embedded in this dark comic of drugs and rehab are incubating elements of Le Va’s future art. “F!”: A body in headlong flight passes through a wall. “THONK”: Another body slams right into it. Glass shatters. Things get erased. Three empty canvases edge into sight. Most salient to his future art will prove the seriality of cartoons themselves, one action leading inexorably to the next, a story unfolding frame by frame. Or, as in the case of underground cartoons, shit just happens, in one space after another.

    These drawings come out of Le Va’s youthful addiction to strips, which he started drawing in junior high school, and feed into his student works on canvas at art school. Born in 1941 and raised in Long Beach, California, Le Va’s first interest was architecture. One high school assignment was to design, draft, and construct a house (at reduced scale). If the teacher could stand on the roof and it didn’t collapse, you got an A; Le Va and his partner got As. His professional pursuit of architecture ended with his dropping out of college. But even after he reentered school to pursue a degree in art, he continued to take classes in architecture, and started to study psychology. The course that made the biggest impression on his intellectual development was a graduate seminar on aesthetics taught by Ralph Cohen. It started Le Va thinking about art in conceptual and metaphysical terms, as well as the artist’s responsibilities along those lines. (Cohen’s own scholarship advanced a literary history based on separate networks of activity, not linear continuity—a useful model to keep in view of Le Va’s future development along separatist lines.[footnote=1]) After a short stint at Los Angeles College of Art and Design (a place he later dubbed “brain-less and commercial”[footnote=2]), he transferred to Otis Art Institute, where he received his M.F.A. in 1967. He started out in painting and inadvertently moved to sculpture, when, to escape the canvas’s boxed-in parameters, he set out to make cartoons in three-dimensions, room-size. Constructed from painted Masonite and canvas elements, either stuffed or stretched, these tableaux set the household on edge. Mattresses consume a pillow. A yellow wall suffers a blow that sends a piece flying to the floor, where it lies like a missing puzzle part. “A literally negative space,” curator Marcia Tucker nailed it, in her 1979 survey of Le Va’s art.[footnote=3] The issues may have been conventional to sculpture but the work—expressionist, surreal, and subversive—looked more like the stuff coming out of the ceramics studios of the California funk artists. A West Coast response in clay to the same underground impulses as Chicago’s “hairy who” painters, these artists were animating the domestic landscape with teapots, mugs, and other vessels gone bad. Le Va’s drawings expressed a shared interest in “abstracted household objects, concerned with the specific functions of an action, and resulting in movement around a page.”[footnote=4] This emphasis on action over image drives a series from around 1965, in which the comic-book structure has been lifted as a framework for fragmentation. The title underscores the action: Paint Sprayed through Cut Out Areas of Comic Book Frames, with Ink Line Added. It also points to what’s missing: the cartoons, characters, and language, all of which were cut out of the comic-book frames and discarded to make way for Le Va’s abstraction.

     

    Three Hours Later . . .

    “I remember one day, after I’d been constructing a piece for about three hours, I suddenly became aware of all the debris on the floor, bits of canvas and other stuff, and this residue seemed so much more interesting and significant than what I was making.”[footnote=5] From Le Va’s version of what transpired one day in his studio in 1966, you can see what’s coming next. In other words, maybe chance was not involved. He was bound, at some point, to look down and see the solution. It is remarkable how many problems and questions Le Va would subsequently formulate by way of the debris on that floor. What immediately interested him in the mess he had made was that it wasn’t a mess at all. It represented an orderly process that had taken place over time and, as such, marked both time and process, as well as space. It also created the anticipation, and, to some degree, the identity, of an absent presence. This is not to say, for instance, that if you analyzed the dust in Brancusi’s studio—where and how it was distributed—you could ever reconstruct that artist’s Sleeping Muse; however, you would know that something had been done to a block of marble, since removed from the scene. Indeed, the fact that you couldn’t make sculpture from its debris is exactly what must have appealed to Le Va, given the degree to which the three-dimensional objects in his own studio space failed to divert his attention.

    Le Va’s first formulations literally toss around questions of perception. A group of works from 1966 consists of sheets of monochromatic canvas, mostly red and blue, draped on the floor, each with some key element, always yellow in color, scattered across the top. These yellow elements open specific lines of inquiry. In one case, jigsaw pieces lead one to puzzle over what to make of this material. Is the color somehow coded? In another, wooden tallies (a simple wooden instrument for measuring) cause one to wonder how, or if, the parts of the work measure up in relation to one another.

    In one of these works, the title 114 Pieces of Paper Folded but none the same prompts us to contemplate a given set of possibilities. The keen observer might surmise, for example, that all the little papers flattened would equal the surface area of the sixteen-foot-long blue sheet of fabric they are lying on. Related drawings continue the game. Six Hands, 1966, shows squares of fabric being dealt out like cards in a poker game onto the floor. A set of working drawings in the studio shows the artist shuffling numbered index cards to arrive at sequencing structures. Clearly, much can be made of even the simplest materials scattered on the floor.

     

    Waiting

    Having demonstrated that things are never as disorderly as they appear, Le Va was ready to frame his next question. But first he had to deal with the problem of unraveling. At the suggestion of “a girl I knew,” he ended up in the fabric district of Los Angeles buying felt.[footnote=6] It was cheaper than canvas. Soft, but not without body, it was easy to cut. And, most important, since it was composed from boiled and pressed wool fibers, making it more like paper than cloth, it didn’t unravel when you worked with it. Back in the studio, he was drawn to its pliancy: “Then the question became: when is a piece in a state of flux, or how do you describe what state a piece is in? For instance, folded felt could be about folding, but it could also…be about waiting to be used, or waiting to be kept, or waiting to be cut, or just waiting.”[footnote=7]

    The floor works he was making in his studio at Otis were not taken seriously by his teachers and peers; he was forbidden to submit them to the graduate exhibition. Sculpture, he was told, required a pedestal. Since participating in the show was mandatory for his degree—and a base was something he refused to even consider—Le Va submitted something in a frame—well, ten frames to be exact. Lobbed as a sculptural salvo at the Otis administration, Felt: Placed, Folded, and Compressed, 1966-67, is a fully realized work of art. Ten boxlike frames each contains a piece of folded gray felt. The frames can be lined up or shown in a grid, as long as the felt reads, in sequence, from most complex to most simply folded. A study in compression, you perceive this sequence as much with your eye as with your body: The squeeze of all those wrinkles pressing against the Plexiglas, relaxing frame by frame, ends like a smooth sigh of relief.

    Upon graduating, the California art world of the late sixties was not where Barry Le Va wanted to be. He had been motivated throughout art school by a powerful reaction to minimalism, the dominant movement of an era predominated over by New York. Minimalism’s conceptual rigor, its adherence to rules of measure and sequence, appealed to Le Va’s analytical bent. But its emphasis on the object repelled him. He was “disgusted with the precious object, work primarily concerned with polished surfaces, color, plastic materials and small size—and the materialist attitudes that supported it.”[footnote=8] Le Va may as well have been pointing at the work of Larry Bell. Bell’s anodized glass cubes made him one of the luminaries of the “finish fetish” group of artists (the yin to funk’s yang), who were applying the surface sheen and high-tech materials of the West Coast’s car culture, and air and space industry, to the minimalist gestalt. In recent conversation, Le Va has maintained dislike of the regional scene in which he found himself working. But he also conceded that certain art had stuck with him over the years—Bell’s cubes, for instance—as well as the importance of experiencing firsthand some of minimalism’s iconic works. He cites Sol LeWitt’s One Set of Nine Pieces, at the Dwan Gallery, in April 1967, and the work of Frank Stella, whom the Ferus Gallery had been representing since 1963, and whose monumental series of “Black Paintings” Le Va considers formative. Stella’s use of mechanical-drawing devices, such as protractors and French curves, to generate series of compositions would also seem relevant to Le Va. An exhibition he did not see was the 1963 Marcel Duchamp retrospective, organized by Walter Hopps, at the Pasadena Art Museum. Given the importance of the exhibition in relation to what was happening in contemporary art at that moment, it probably didn’t matter if one saw it or not. Marcel Duchamp’s art and ideas were just part of the basic atmosphere, like air.

     

    Serial

    Grids and sequences were the structuring devices of the day, as the landmark exhibition “Serial Imagery,” at the Pasadena Art Museum, in 1968, demonstrated. Going from Claude Monet’s “Haystacks” to Duchamp’s “Stoppages,” to Stella’s “Vee Series” (with Larry Bell’s boxes in between), curator John Coplans argued the ubiquity of the “repeated form or structure shared equally by each work in a group.”[footnote=9] He cast the Impressionist haystacks in light of the nineteenth-century “theory of continuous independent variables” to show that serial imagery’s historic premises lay in modern math and science. He pitched its rhythms as the overtones to a contemporary American life based on capitalism, with “its highly systematic yet flexible process of production.”[footnote=10] Serial art was also played as a form of cultural feedback: its internal logic of progression results in interdependent series that distort the concept of masterpiece. Ultimately, redundancy proves a radical means of artistic agency, “a positive act that continuously affirms the power and continuity of the creative process.”[footnote=11]

    That’s one way to understand the serial nature of Le Va’s art. A more idiosyncratic—and revealing—note comes from Öyvind Fahlström. Throughout the sixties, this Swedish artist’s work was exhibited in the context of pop, a context that barely begins to contain the imaginative and mental sweep of a body of work that ranged in form from art to editorials, and in content from cold war gamesmanship to Robert Crumb. (In an article for the Swedish press, Fahlström reported “one of the truly major artists today” is ZAP COMlX’s Robert Crumb. “Really.”[footnote=12]) One need take only a cursory look at Fahlström’s art to appreciate the attraction for Le Va. To begin with, there is the cartoon imagery based on action cartoons and underground comics—as well as, WHUMP, their sounds. This imagery appears in the form of cutouts, fragments, even movable parts in paintings and sculpture installations that were fashioned after games, such as dominoes and Monopoly, and on pinball machines. In 1966, Fahlström’s work made the cover of Art News. Inside was a feature by Suzi Gablick, who wrote of the work’s “recurrent factors—proportion, size, color, topography, cycles….Lemon yellow, for example, denotes a kind of energy or high-voltage factor.”[footnote=13] She describes a pressure building throughout compartmentalized pictorial elements, which are generating “shock waves, turbulence, inhibitory action, synaptic mechanisms, trigger phenomena,” a pressure that builds into “precisely what is called a time series by the statisticians: a discontinuous image…(like comic strips).”[footnote=14] Gablik is describing Sitting…. a painting from 1962 that launched Fahlström on a four-year investigation. Based on pictorial fragments abstracted from Batman comics, the painting’s composition resembles a cross between a sectional view of a dollhouse and a page from a comic book. It is clearly a source for Le Va’s Painted Sprayed through Cut Out Areas. It also serves as a point of departure for Le Va’s own investigations of “time series,” such as Bearings Rolled (six specific instants: no particular order), 1966-67. These six sheets of paper bearing arrangements of black circles are the opposite of the ten-part Felt: Placed, Folded, and Compressed. That sculpture’s order was fixed to show a seemingly continuous flow of activity from (wrinkled) start to (smooth) finish. These drawings represent a nonsequential sequence of events: One action does not lead to another; in fact, it doesn’t seem to lead anywhere. Events, however, are not random either; the ball bearings were obviously placed, or dropped, or rolled by some mysterious hand. And inasmuch as the study suggests no signs of completion, it builds the pressure of uncertain expectations.

    This said, there is no stylistic similarity between Le Va’s minimal abstractions and Fahlström’s figurative pop fragments. And here lies an important clue to Le Va’s approach to the art of his day and to making art in general: Barry Le Va is very much a part of a generation making its moves in response to and as a reaction against minimalism. At the same time, he is an artist who resists moving in step, even with those who, like him, are in the advance guard. Le Va’s determination to set his own course leads him to establish very specific points of reference. These references are not necessarily unique to him—in most cases, they are part of the common reader of contemporary culture. But both the sources he elects and information he extracts are extremely specific to his particular interests. Thus, these references, or at least a sense of how they operate, become integral to both the content and meaning of his work, as well as to its self-positioning at a few decided paces remove from whatever appears to be its immediate context. Öyvind Fahlström is a case in point. Neither obvious nor esoteric, Fahlström’s art is not necessarily the first place anyone would look for information about open-ended serial structures and the transformation of physical turbulence and pressure into visual abstraction. Another unexpected choice is Jess, whom Le Va references, along with Joseph Cornell, Fahlström, and Larry Poons, among his other early predilections. The San Francisco artist Jess had, like Fahlström, also entered the art world through the gaping doorways of pop art by reassembling cut-up Dick Tracy and Krazy Kat cartoons into even deeper states of disorder. His use of puzzle pieces in the making of his collage-based work also would have interested Le Va. And while it is misleading to call Le Va an underground artist, his work draws its energy from subversive and inconspicuous sources and by setting itself apart—even periodically—from itself.

     

    Rip and Kick

    Perhaps it was resistance to his California context that fueled the incredibly concerted development of Le Va’s art over the next couple of years. According to his agenda, this development was essentially a campaign of destruction. His objective was to “eliminate a contained mass.” He says, “I wanted to rip out anything that in my eyes made traditional works of art, art, to get rid of any lingering object orientation by emphasizing horizontal scale.”[footnote=15] Place supplanted the notion of mass: “I had a background in architecture—how things were located interested me.” And time, the great leveler, was to be contended with as a force of “continuous breakdown and disintegration” and as a principle “for change and instability to be inherent within the work.” What was the motive driving this disruption? Le Va says, “I wanted to reduce art to my terms, then rebuild it—my terms, with nobody else’s influence.”[footnote=16] Influence was the enemy.

    Campaigns require headquarters, and Le Va held a number of outposts. For daily work, there was his studio, located first on Western Boulevard, then off MacArthur Park, then in the Echo Park area. And there was the Lytton Center of Visual Arts, located in the corporate lobby of a downtown bank.[footnote=17] On days when the gallery was closed to the public, Le Va had access to the terrazzo floor as a work space, where he could set up and photograph his distributions free from the distractions (and disorder) of the studio. This arrangement was to evolve into its own form of practice, in which temporary satellite spaces become the primary sites of Le Va’s production, and the studio all but disappears into a home office, or drafting room, from which to launch these schemes.

    Le Va participated in his first exhibition in a group show, at the Lytton Center, called “New Comers ’67,” organized by Larry Urrutia. The curator had seen Le Va’s student work at Otis and invited him to exhibit what Urrutia anticipated would be funky soft sculpture. When he saw the debris that Le Va intended to exhibit lying on the studio floor, Urrutia lapsed into a turmoil that turned into an epiphany: “I knew he was right.” Urrutia credits Le Va’s art with a shift in his own attitude. Subsequent presentations of Robert Irwin’s installations of light and space and Chris Burden’s endurance art at the La Jolla Museum of Art, where Urrutia went to work soon after Lytton shut down, signify the wide range of new art that was coming up from the studios of Southern Californian artists, who, like Le Va, were shucking funk and fetish. Back at the Lytton Center in 1967, however, alternative approaches still landed on shakier ground. Urrutia says that on the morning of the opening of “New Comers,” he discovered that the janitor had swept up the art of Barry Le Va.

    Working with specific “quantities of different elements” put down on the floor “in various locations,” Le Va likens the construction of his first felts to making a pizza.[footnote=18] A drawing suggests just such a process, with the recipe calling for ball bearings and felt, and the process leaving room for improvisation. “If I wasn’t satisfied with the way it looked, I would kick the felt or shove it around,”[footnote=19] Le Va says of his last-minute adjustments, evidence of which can be seen, for instance, in the sudden heave upward and over to one side that shapes Untitled #10, 1967. Under the impact of these gestures, the early floor pieces appear to open up, pull apart, and drift outward. Le Va says, “Gradually I became less and less concerned with the ordering of parts and more concerned with horizontal scale, vastness.”[footnote=20] Four Sections; placed parallel, 1967, overtakes space. Four huge bolts of felt have been hurled open across the floor, which is littered in more fabric cut into smaller sheets and tiny particles, as if an explosion had occurred on impact. What were formerly discrete clusters of materials are now distributions of matter. The floor is now a field.

     

    Snapping

    Photographs impart an image of Le Va’s installations literally spilling out of view. Having acquired his first camera as an art student in order to take pictures of his own work, Le Va’s studio is filled with black-and-white prints, contact sheets, and negatives of his early distributions. To study this material is to become expert in identifying the floors, baseboards, and radiators of Le Va’s various working locations with an eye toward reconstructing his art’s sequences and process. One sees, stop-action style, like a short animation, a bolt of felt, deposited next to a giant pair of shears, get cut up, dispersed, arranged, and rearranged. And so do the photographs begin to receive a similar treatment. In order to accommodate the spreading vastness of his work, Le Va started cutting up his snapshots and cobbling them together into panoramic views. Mounted on black photo-album paper and kept in binders, the original purpose of these montages seems to have been as ready references for future re-creations of works, which, out of necessity, had been destroyed shortly after they were made in order to make way for the next experiment. Or just to clean up the floor. Perhaps it was the later realization that these works would only ever exist as photographs that led Le Va to develop them into a body of work in their own right. This combined with his predilection for turning process into art, a predilection that routinely manifests itself in new bodies of work based on the source materials, scraps, and artifacts of his activities.

    The photo albums were eviscerated and some of the contents were transformed into works on paper. He started to produce larger-scaled prints for the express purpose of making photomontage. And it makes sense that he would. Pictorial shards spliced together into synthetic though jarringly discontinuous wholes are exactly how one expects to see works that aimed “to destroy eye containment and focus. Fracture vision, structure and continuity.”[footnote=21]

     

    Plotting

    The idea of making art that can no more be captured at a glance (of the eye) than with a shot (of the camera) implies stages of perception. These stages unfold significantly through the experience of Le Va’s work on paper. Although his photographs inform us of how he sees his installations, his drawings tell us how to read them. First, some general observations: Le Va’s training in mechanical drawing informs his art on every level, starting with the drafting table that is his studio furniture. Drawing on sheets of graph paper and rolls of vellum, using T-squares and templates, compasses and straightedges, and the facility of his own hand, Le Va works with a draftsmanly precision that renders every sketch a plan. For him, drawing is fundamentally generative. A piece of paper is working space, not just for the act of representation but for real activities. Look at To Re arrange (from a parallelogram to a rectangle), grey felt sheets, 1966, a plan view for a room-scale installation based on the movement of a parallel rule, sweeping at a fixed angle, across the surface of a drafting table. The translation isn’t always this direct. Even so, the more study paid Le Va’s drawings, the more keenly aware one becomes of his fluency in mechanical drawing—its tools and techniques, its standards of representation and points of view—and his aptitude for making drawings that read as installations that revert to plan.

    The discipline of drawing also allowed Le Va to do something that his installations did not. “Somehow when I make a drawing, it allows me to see an end….No matter how tentative, unstable, etc. they seem, I can finish a drawing. In sculpture—a series is finished or completed when it starts leading to other ideas…no individual sculpture is ever finished.”[footnote=22] Simply to experience the satisfaction of completion, then, drawing is essential to his practice. No wonder, Le Va confides, “I draw most of the time.”[footnote=23]

     

    Willful Accident

    And write, too. Part of being trained in mechanical drawing is to learn lettering. Le Va’s art makes this skill the bottom line of so many of his drawings in which inscriptions read as specifications. They call for felt, glass, and aluminum (rods or ball bearings), materials that are, as far as building goes, cheap and quasi-industrial—a legacy of minimalism, which transformed the local hardware into the art supply store. Judging from his plans, Le Va seems to have chosen his materials for their performance potential: Balls roll, rods frame, glass breaks, felt submits. You see it happening right on the drawing paper: When a ball bearing is dropped, it rolls practically off of the sheet. On paper was certainly a safer place than in the studio for testing the results of dropping and throwing sheets of glass, a material that, despite its fascinating violence, doesn’t actually show up in Le Va’s installations for several years after its first appearance in his drawings. And, in this respect, the drawings function like patents, by initiating bodies of work that Le Va keeps in circulation. Continuous and Related Activities; Discontinued by the Act of Dropping, as we see it here at ICA, with a sheet of glass dropped like an egg into an absorbent field of felt, wasn’t first realized until 1982. But the concept of disrupting one thing with another dates to 1967, when ball bearings and aluminum rods fell into the field. “From the very beginning,” Le Va told curator Marianne Brouwer, “I started to introduce other materials…because it was a way of interrupting, or disrupting, the piece by changing my activity….Also there is something about glass that has always interested me. It’s the inherent visual noise…The dropping of the glass is a fairly willful act and its configuration is just accident…It’s the decision made, it’s the end. It’s destruction, visual noise, yes.”[footnote=24]

     

    Empty Corners

    In terms of tracking the development of his work, Le Va’s drawings represent more of a time series than a sequence. Discrete arrangements don’t just flow over time into being allover expansions on the floor. Instead, vastness comes by filling the field in every way imaginable, including carpet-bombing the expanse with arrangements. Or by simultaneously throwing materials to eight different locations from eight different distances in the room. Simultaneity is Le Va’s operative mode. “I could never work on one thing at a time,” he confides, only to betray the nervous energy and tension behind his approach.[footnote=25] “Daily activities, residue of change, of activities, causes and effects, elements in transit, debris, empty corners and places, waiting, etc., seemed to hold more potential and excitement for me.”[footnote=26]

    Turning over the possibilities for covering more ground and getting into those corners that intrigued him, Le Va divided his approaches. There were arrangements to be made: “Arranged, de arranged, borrowed, exchanged,” a drawing is annotated. And there were deductive processes: Scatter particles over sheets of felt, then remove the sheets. As shown in both the drawings and the installations, the results are conflicting, but equally resolved sweeps of regimen and entanglement, fractures and blurs. And it’s as if from the fusion of these experiments over time that Le Va’s distributions appear to arrive at their next imagery of purely particular matter.

    Focus suddenly shifts to just about the tiniest thing—poppy seeds. Like miniature distributions, the seeds were blown or scraped into different configurations, then photographed. The photographs were composed into grids, similar to the ball-bearing drawings, except for the incursion of an uncanny sense of scale. Even when you know you are looking at itsy bitsy seeds on a table, the pictures transform before your eyes into magnified magnetic dust, distantly viewed earth formations, or room-scale distributions by Barry Le Va. These disorienting views spin to mind another tabletop account, An Anecdoted Topography of Chance.[footnote=27] This book by the Swiss Fluxus artist Daniel Spoerri, which first appeared in 1966, became an instant art-world classic. Le Va deems it one of his favorite pieces of Fluxus art, which he otherwise dismissed for its emphasis on object-making and audience participation. (A music lover, he does concede a fondness for John Cage’s ideas and writings, and “especially the pieces for prepared piano.”[footnote=28]) Spoerri’s book is basically a catalog of the kitchen tabletop, starting with a piece of white bread “cut only this morning by the actress RENATE STEIGER.” Each item is illustrated, with “Item 1a, Crumbs” adding another possibility for viewing Le Va’s poppy seeds as particles of bread fallen from an actress’s lips. Laid out on the tabletop like artifacts, Spoerri asks us to consider each item “the way SHERLOCK HOLMES, starting out with a single object, could solve a crime.”[footnote=29] One appreciates the appeal to Le Va. Although his art operates outside the realm of anecdote, its premise is the same as that underlying Spoerri’s topography, in which nothing is left to chance.

    At some time in 1967, one of his instructors at Otis, the printmaker Arthur Secunda, sent photographs of Le Va’s work to the art historian Barbara Rose. A founding editor of Artforum, Secunda was working on a series of prints in the aftermath of the violence of the Watts riots of 1965. In the April 1967 issue of Artforum, Rose had written an essay proposing a new category she dubbed “didactic art.”[footnote=30] Exemplified by Marcel Duchamp’s readymade Bottle Rack, didactic art was said to have “no esthetic content” beyond the equivalent aesthetic pleasure of solving, say, a math problem. Its “primary intention is to instruct.”[footnote=31] The essay prompted Secunda to think that one of New York’s most influential critics might like to learn about a young Los Angeles artist who seemed to be making some pretty convincing didactic art. Rose was impressed enough to feature Barry Le Va in “A Gallery Without Walls,” a roundup of young talent to watch that appeared in the March-April 1968 issue of Art in America. In it, Rose writes appreciatively of the “casual antiformal arrangements” that she sees in La Va’s art as a “reaction against conceptually predetermined composition.” With this brief characterization, she plugs the California artist’s work into the New York scene as it was being defined at that very moment in the April issue of Artforum. In an essay called “Anti Form,” the artist and theoretician Robert Morris declared minimalism’s “imperative for the well-built thing” a mission accomplished and issued “the process of ‘making itself’” to be art’s next mandate. Steps were already being taken, as observed by the tendencies of Morris and his peers to use materials “other than rigid industrial ones”—to dispense with tools and let gravity do the work of shaping “forms which are not projected in advance” and are then only temporary objects, “since replacing will result in another configuration.” Thus, it was by extrapolation, in print, that Barry Le Va’s work gained its first critical exposure in relation to the burgeoning terms of process art, and landed on target for its future reception in New York.

    Back home in California, Le Va’s art was also gaining visibility. In 1968, he was the recipient of the Young Talent Award from the Los Angeles County Museum, an award he credits to the support of the museum’s curators Jim Monte, Maurice Tuchman, and Jane Livingston.[footnote=32] When an article by Livingston ran in the November Artforum, the magazine featured Le Va’s work on its cover. Felt atomized over an expanse of wooden floor brought fully, though not incontrovertibly, into view “a personal stylistic history of extraordinary repleteness.” Livingston validated Le Va’s two-year campaign of ripping and tearing by staking his claim to the “distribution.” Quoting the artist, she wrote: “The distribution is defined as ‘relationships of points and configurations to each other,’ or concomitantly, ‘sequences of events.’” The work’s “antiformal” qualities, vast scale, and horizontality were emphasized. And Le Va’s investigations in felt were pointedly prioritized over Morris’s relatively incidental use of the material, which cropped up in his work in late 1967.[footnote=33] Nevertheless, Livingston took issue with some of Le Va’s “assumptions and terms.” She posed, “One of the most controversial aspects of Le Va’s recent works, and what strikes one most immediately on seeing them in the flesh, is the question of rearrangeability.” By insisting that his installations were in no way random, Le Va went against the casual protocol of process art: Antiformalists tolerated chance, Le Va’s art resisted it. What happens, then, if somebody walks through a piece and inadvertently (or purposefully) rearranges it? One assumes that only the artist is allowed to kick his work. So, is the piece destroyed? After an exhibition, one has no choice but to sweep up a Le Va. How, then, does the artist re-create his work without changing it? In other words, Livingston implied, how can you deal with any aspect of randomness, even its absence, without admitting its inevitability?

    Presented with his work’s inherent contradictions, Le Va claims to have “secretly enjoyed the fact that my pieces were impossible to own for any length of time.” His day job, working as a handler for the art-moving company Cart & Crate, resulted in a growing disillusionment with art’s commerce and containment. Le Va wasn’t alone in his resistance. In 1967, Lucy Lippard and James Chandler published their essay “The Dematerializaton of Art,” which called for, among other things, art that was so ridiculously cheap that anyone could own it. Or art that was so ephemeral, or so monumental, that nobody could. Such radically alternative art was to be equated with the radical politics of the day, as a statement, or, better, an act of refusal against the status quo. And while Le Va’s distributions and disillusionment seemed mostly right in keeping with its era, the issue of his work’s rearrangeability, far from dematerializing, only grows more persistent, problematic, and even emblematic of his art over time.

    When Le Va’s felt distribution erupted onto the cover of Artforum, he was in Minnesota experimenting with powders. The magazine’s cover image, with its lurid yellow floorboards, was shot inside the auditorium of the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Despite the prestige, Le Va had to be convinced by his friend the artist Bas Jan Ader to accept the school’s invitation to be a visiting artist. After paying his first visit to New York, in the summer of 1968, Le Va moved to Minnesota, where he was to spend the next two years, traveling back to New York when he was not teaching first-year foundation courses. As he later told the critic Robert Pincus-Witten, living in the Midwest was a period of relative isolation that turned into an opportunity to step back from his art’s process and reflect on its content—or the seeming absence of content, as the title of Pincus-Witten’s 1975 article, “Barry Le Va: The Invisibility of Content,” suggests. Going back to his own college days in Ralph Cohen’s aesthetics class, Le Va seems to have been answering his original question of “how” to make work by assuming responsibility for the next question of “why.” What followed was a two-year period of investigation to get at all kinds of possible ways of filling the distributional field with something as immaterial as meaning. Dust, text, and bullets would be involved. A typewriter, a tape recorder, and about twenty meat cleavers would be picked up along the way.

     

    Scrape

    One of the first things Le Va acquired in his quest for content was a taste for mystery novels. “In 1968 I started to read Sherlock Holmes—in fact, I’ve been reading him on and off ever since—and that eventually permeated my thinking.”[footnote=34] Like Spoerri, Le Va was fascinated by the process of analysis, association, and reconstruction that any given object or situation could trigger in the mind of a detective, for whom every item was a possible clue to an ostensible crime. In his apartment, Le Va continued to make distributions using felt. In his studio, he started using powders, like flour and chalk, which he threw, then shaped, in relation to the framework of the room: “I would stand by the wall and throw flour with two hands across the room. When it had hit the floor…I would scrape away about half the dust in relation to some architectural feature of the space, say in a diagonal line from one corner to another, leaving half the surface bare.”[footnote=35] As usual. Le Va documented his activities with photographs. It’s almost impossible to look at the black-and-white pictures of these eerie and ephemeral studio pieces and not feel you’re faced with forensic evidence that something bad happened here.

     

    Smoke and Liquid

    To live in Minnesota is to experience winter like no Southern Californian knows. As much as mystery began to permeate Le Va’s work, so did the weather and landscape of the Midwest. (Is there a hint of exoticism about the word “permafrost” when it crops up again and again in Le Va’s notes and writings?) Between February and March of 1969, Le Va makes three environmental installations involving minerals and their potential reactions. The first, a commission by the State University of Wisconsin to work with students to create a temporary outdoor work, Le Va considered a failure, which makes it all the more telling of his intent. The project began with the artist marking a map of the River Falls campus with points derived from a plan of radiating circles and intersecting lines. He then instructed the students to mark the actual locations with wooden stakes, and, one day later, to place a bag of limestone concrete at each location. On day three, they were supposed to remove six of the stakes and sprinkle the concrete around the spot in a thinly layered circle. Instead, Le Va reported they just acted like “hippies having playtime—everyone’s an artist” and used the gray powder to draw pictures in the snow.[footnote=36] Le Va’s piece, which was now destroyed, was supposed to have been completed by the weather (and its water) reacting with the powder to leave a residue of hardened crusts and bags of concrete located around wooden sticks distributed across the landscape.

    In an exposé in Art News by the artist Larry Rosing, who was teaching at River Falls, the project was diplomatically deemed a victim of its own success as a challenging work of  contemporary art—something Rosing considered no small feat: “Even though we accept Oldenburg’s grave-digging gesture behind the Metropolitan Museum in Central Park, and the splashes of such an artist as Richard Serra, we felt attacked.” Le Va recalls being booed in the lecture hall by an audience that found his work to be just plain too “temporal, incomprehensible and immaterial.”[footnote=37] When a student questioned him about  his art’s “substancelessness,” Le Va said that as far as he was concerned, if the work had been made of liquid or smoke, it would still have been too substantial to his liking.

    His next works, executed almost immediately upon his return to Minneapolis, bring climatic changes indoors. On Tuesday, February 19, Le Va distributed paper towels,  mineral oil, and white powder all over the parquet floor of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. The first of two consecutive installations, Installation #1: Outwards (from the left) jumped several claims.[footnote=38] It was Le Va’s first solo exhibition and among the first presentations of process art within a traditional museum context. Mike Steele, of the Minneapolis Tribune, reported hearing “a good many titters…from people who felt the piece was out of place alongside Egyptian mummies and Chinese bronzes.”[footnote=39] On the contrary, Le Va’s distributions would seem to be right at home within the museum context of interpretation and debris. His sticky towels sprawled as ceremoniously as any old bitumen and bandages of an ancient’s last rites. Steele commended the museum for “presenting a local talent who had just been cited in Newsweek’s review of the Whitney Annual as a notable absence from “the nation’s showcase for young artists.”[footnote=40] From Le Va’s perspective, his museum show was just a sign of the times: “People are beginning to make room for these attitudes now.”[footnote=41]

    Outwards (from the left) seems, nevertheless, to belong outdoors. (Presumably, excess linseed oil could be rubbed into wood parquet after the installation closed.) The mess of materials, combined with the absorptive interaction among them, makes the gallery floor into a volatile piece of ground. That Le Va was thinking about his work in such earthen terms is disclosed by a drawing on notebook grid paper. Inscribed “Seattle Museum,” the ink sketch was his proposal for “557,087,” Lucy Lippard’s great exhibition explicator of her concept of dematerialization, titled after the population of Seattle. Whether or not Le Va’s plan was actually realized is a mystery,[footnote=42] but it called for a distribution of three materials, laid out in three horizontal bands: white flour, black magnesium dioxide, and black felt.[footnote=43] Along the bottom edge of the drawing is an elevation view of the distribution, showing its topography. Adding a touch of climate is a note for the felt to be wetted, thus humidifying the room and filling it with the pungent odor of wet wool. The installation’s title: Bog.

    The paper towels could very well have been lying wet on the institute’s floor when Le Va struck again in Minneapolis. His next multimineral installation occurred sometime around March 1969, at the Walker Art Center. The most secret of the three, it was also the most richly colored. Red iron oxide, an ingredient commonly used by ceramists in making glazes, is dusted over large areas of the floor. Pours of mineral oil soak into the powder and pool onto the bare surface. Pieces of glass lie scattered throughout. Seeing these materials flung around a room in big, performative gestures, one inevitably thinks of abstract expressionism—Jackson Pollock, especially. This reference came up in the early discussions of Le Va’s work as routinely as he quashed it. To the Minneapolis reporter Mike Steele, Le Va explained that was what teachers in art school were telling him to do: “Paint still life in the style of the expressionists,” and “that much of what he does is a reaction against it.” Having determined to rip art down to his own terms, Le Va was not about to be pegged as the progeny of “Jack the Dripper.”

    Creating a reactive situation is what interested him. According to the title—Room 2 of a 3-room, 3-part installation utilizing various quantities of the 3 materials—Le Va originally envisioned his installation at the Walker as one of three parts. Three may be the smallest number one can use to animate a sequence and introduce an element of choice and confusion, too. Especially in Le Va’s drawings look for plans in which three identical rooms, drawn adjacent to one another, can also be read as three alternative outcomes to a single proposition. At the Walker, moving from one to the next would be like experiencing a chain reaction. Even without the other two rooms, the installation is a picture of flux and fluidity. Over time, the various materials in their different degrees of dispersal and saturation would slowly congeal, haze, seep, and, perhaps, inasmuch as there may have been chemistry at work, even smolder.

     

    Accretion Veins

    Missing from photodocumentation is the bitter cold. On the verge of destruction, the building had already been abandoned to make way for new construction when Walker curators Richard Koshalek and Christopher Finch approached Le Va with a perversely underground exhibition opportunity.[footnote=14] Namely, would he consider working alone under extreme winter conditions on a major museum installation that only a few invited viewers would be able to experience before the work was destroyed along with the entire building? Naturally, Le Va accepted. Given free run of the empty museum, Le Va says he treated the building like “an extension of my studio.”[footnote=45] His plan for three installations, “with varying quantities of humidity—dry, damp, and wet,” was tempered by the weather, which was nearly impossible to work in, and would have neutralized everything to “freeze” anyway. The panes of glass, scavenged from the wreckage of the framing department, did enable him “to set up a dialog between the inside and outside of the building by means of the skylight.”[footnote=46] Photographs catch the ceiling panes reflected in the glass on the floor. One can readily imagine the play of natural light, softening and sharpening form and color throughout the (short) winter day.

    Although not widely seen, the installation was well documented in a contemporary publication project by Le Va for Design Quarterly.[footnote=47] Le Va’s contribution consisted of a portfolio of notes, photographs, and proposals related to his recent installations. There is a definition of the word “permafrost,” sketches around the notion of “absolute permeability,” and ruminations on “accretion veins,” or those “veins formed by the repeated filling of channel ways and their reopening.”[footnote=48] The definitions come from the Dictionary of Geological Terms, a well-worn paperback “for the student, the rockhound, and the engineer” that the artist still has at his studio.[footnote=49] Among the entries that have been circled or marked with an X are “air mass,” “bog,” “decrepitation,” “flood-plain meander scar,” “group velocity,” “impact,” “incompetent bed,” “wind shadow,” and “zero curtain.” One catches the poetry—both abstract and concrete—that scientific terminology readily transmits beyond its ken, and to which Le Va’s analytical mind and ear would have been especially attuned. For similar reasons, he likes scientific illustration and has collected, over the years, textbooks on biochemistry, electronics, physics, and neurology, among other favored subjects. He especially likes finding these books in German; since he cannot read the text, they become sources of pure visual information, which he abstracts into his art. Beyond the mixture of precision and obscurity, which Le Va obviously finds pleasing, these sources impart their own meaning to the artist’s visual lexicon. With a sense of the dictionary in hand, one sees Le Va’s distributions turn telluric, resembling earth matter and the forces, violent beyond comprehension, that it takes to shape it. At the same time, his choice of images—of veins reopening, for instance—blur the boundaries between earth and body. The external world collapses deep into an anatomical interior; the seismic and sublime share space with the surgical and psychopathic.

     

    Hurting the Building

    One only has to look at photographs of the Walker installation to get the visceral meaning of his words, when Le Va later says he wanted to hurt the building.[footnote=50] Under the impact of his art, the room appears the victim of some environmental disaster, a flood or flames, or war. The room’s ghost slips from the wreckage into another work, a conceptual piece from roughly the same moment, entitled Walker Art Center: Information Tape Piece. A typewritten page of text by the artist represents the museum in transition: “ART HAS BEEN LENT OUT. PERSONNEL, RECORDS, FURNITURE, ETC., ALL IN TEMPORARY SITUATION.” It focuses on the switchboard: “ALL INFORMATION THAT GOES IN OR COMES OUT PASSES THROUGH THIS CENTRAL CHANNEL,” which the piece proposes to tap for a daylong tape recording. “NO EDITING.” When the new museum opens, this “DIARY OF ONE DAY’S INFORMATION” would be played as though streamed from some lost dimension in time into an empty room.

     

    Omitting a Section

    In addition to mixing materials to cause reactions, Le Va was also using pure white powders to overtake space through surface alone.[footnote=51] Verging on immateriality, chalk dust and flour both had the ability to cover the floor in a way that enabled Le Va to assert a subversive new stature for his work. Even felt offered too much relief for what he had in mind: “The vertical provides too much visual relief, and enables one to determine height—I’m not interested in that aspect of scale.”[footnote=52] When Le Va made his New York debut in May 1969, it was not with one of his signature distributions but with a radically low-profile work in an exhibition that continues to resonate with significance. Organized by the Whitney Museum’s newly hired curators from California, Marcia Tucker and James Monte, “Anti-Illusion: Procedures/Materials” gave institutional authority to an up-and-coming generation of artists who were not only the curators’ peers but also their allies in defiance of all institutional convention.[footnote=53]

    On view from May to June, “Anti-Illusion” was a litany of risk. Almost all of the work was made on-site. None of it looked like what most people then (or now) considered art. Some of the artists had never shown before. One artist used hay and grease, another borrowed money and watched the interest accrue. There was a weeklong program of performance, film, and new music, which, like most of the rest of the art on view, was freshly imported from downtown. (Only a subway ride away, Soho was a cultural chasm away from the uptown scene of museums and galleries.) In all, process-based work by more than twenty-one artists—including Lynda Benglis (whose work was never finally shown), Philip Glass, Eva Hesse, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Richard Serra, Joel Shapiro, Keith Sonnier, and Richard Tuttle—was presented. Having achieved nothing short of an organizational coup, the curators became the artists’ coconspirators in a takeover demonstration of some fairly extreme propositions, which demanded from the museum and audience alike new forms of engagement with contemporary art and contemporary artists.

    Le Va contributed Omitted Section of a Section Omitted, a distribution of flour dusted on the floor in the shape of a hard-edged wedge. Pointing sharply from the wall, it established a clear structural relationship to the surrounding space. “Basically all the pieces with fine dust became barriers. They had a kind of ambivalence about them,” said Le Va.[footnote=54] The whitened floor called attention to itself, but to heed its beckon was to be marked in the act of vandalism by one’s own powdery footprints tracked through the work of art. The process of making this work was also a delicate operation. Curator Tucker recalls Le Va struggling with his studio-rigged sifter—basically, a tin can and a screen—to achieve an almost transparent but perfectly even layer so that the powder revealed as much as it concealed of the irregularly surfaced stone floor below.[footnote=55] She also remembered that he was annoyed by the proximity of other artists’ work. A corridor piece by Bruce Nauman forms an oddly carnivalesque sidewall to Le Va’s white way. Countering less than optimum installation conditions was the positive affirmation of arriving within the art-world context that his work had, for some time, already situated him.

    In her Artforum review of the “Anti-Illusion” exhibition, critic Emily Wasserman commented on the permeability of some of the works on view. “Le Va’s flour dusting was slightly shifted by drafts or the movements of viewers in the vicinity.”[footnote=56] Tucker remembers worse: finding people’s initials in the flour. Perhaps it was in response to the material’s inherent movement that led Le Va to create a pair of installations based on an imagery of drifting lines. Both Six Blown Lines, 1969, and Extended Vertex Meetings: blocked; blown outward, 1969-71, were made by the same process of pouring lines of flour on the floor (yes, like giant lines of cocaine), then carefully blowing each line with an air compressor to create evenly modulated drifts. As ephemeral as they were, these works were rigorously planned in advance. (When starting over means kicking up a cyclone of dust, you want it to work the first time.) Plus, it was essential that the installation relate to its location. Three separate drawings of chalk blown outward show how Le Va typically conceived his installations along a number of different fronts. There is a concise sketch that gives the basic layout, with notes on the work’s “Physical,” “Visual,” and “Mental” objectives, along with abbreviated installation instructions. There are three variations stacked into a single rhapsody on the structure of the piece—each blown line articulated by an accumulation of the soft strokes of an ink marker. And there is a study of the process in which white spray paint brilliantly plays the part of dust blown across the surface of black paper. Note that Le Va blocked the lines of drifting particles with stencils, according to one of his earliest drawing techniques.

    Extended Vertex Meetings: blocked; blown outward was realized, a couple of years after he quit experimenting with powders, in a two-part exhibition organized by the Nigel Greenwood Gallery, in London, in 1971. Changing weekly, four new “Centerpoint” installations were shown at the dealer’s permanent space in Sloane Gardens. This arrangement of presenting an earlier work simultaneously with a new one, as if to establish for viewers the continuity between them, suited Le Va’s investigative process and sense of sequence. For the flour piece, Greenwood requisitioned a warehouse building on Old Burlington Street. A beautiful brick industrial space, with wooden columns, skylights, and walls of windows, it took a lot of preparation to make it disappear. According to Le Va’s specifications, the walls were covered, leaving only a clerestory-band view of the windows, by white gypsum board. The artist’s installation made the walls recede even further, as if pushed by the tides of wide powder blown outward from the center of the room. From this point, standing in a clearing, shaped in a wedge coming off of the doorway, one viewed the piece. Or, as Le Va noted, “Audience stops where piece begins (entrance of work).”[footnote=57] Imagine the tension of standing in that vast empty warehouse, having your vision pulled peripherally in both directions by a gigantic vertex pointing straight ahead through the wall and beyond the space itself. Meanwhile, you’re being physically held in place by some powder on the floor. Think of the vertiginous shifts in scale taking place between following the rush of lines and observing the particular details. Now, factor in the daylight streaming in from above, stirring up enough motes and luminous motion to dissolve the distinction between the installation and the architecture, collapse the two into one, and lift the powdery floor through the open ceiling.

     

    Eliminating Eye Intimacy

    Dust motes make one think of Dust Breeding, a photograph of Marcel Duchamp’s Large Glass as it was pulled out of storage, in 1920, covered in a thick coat of dust. Although he didn’t see the 1963 survey of Duchamp’s work, Le Va treasures his copy of the exhibition catalog—a book that looks like a technical manual with a measured plan drawing of the Large Glass on the cover, which is protected by a printed Mylar jacket. In this book, one sees Duchamp’s work develop from relatively conventional painting and drawing to radically conceptual art. (Along the way, he adopted mechanical drawing as his preferred style of working on paper.) What motivated him was the idea of the “retinal,” a negative term Duchamp coined to describe art that appealed only to the eye. Echoing this in Le Va’s work is an “eye intimacy,” or the notion that you can know a work of art simply by seeing it. It, too, was minted as something to be eliminated. “I thought my 1967-68 felt pieces succeeded in reducing eye intimacy,” he says of his early distributions.[footnote=58] And even though the blankets of powder reduced it even further, there was something to behold in their sheer blankness. Not the case with Le Va’s next major work, which effectively eliminated eye intimacy with a singular act of bodily violence.

    As described in the related notes and drawings, Le Va’s next installation was to represent a movable object coming in contact with an immovable interior boundary. More specifically, the artist’s 170 pound body running as fast as possible into two opposite walls. With thirty-second intervals between each lap, the action was to endure for as long as was physically and mentally possible. Performed without an audience in the gallery where the installation was to be shown, and recorded in stereo, the piece consisted of the tape recording played continuously. The space was empty, except for a pair of speakers on the opposite walls and two strips of masking tape on the floor to mark the course of the “Impact Run.” Le Va executed the work on two separate occasions, each time with a somewhat different emphasis and title. Velocity: Impact Run, the first manifestation, took place in the fall of 1969 at Ohio State University, in Columbus. Here, it was the structure of the piece in relation to its location that interested him. The gallery ran parallel to a busy hallway trafficked by students traveling at different rates, randomly, and in groups of various densities and patterns. Referring to it as his work’s “substructure,” Le Va summarized this activity—“No energy drain (Continuous flow—No Barrier)”—as the antithesis of his own body running back and forth at full speed in a straight line.[footnote=59] Indeed, it was these two parts, each audible to one another through the open door of the gallery, that formed the complete work—the noodling noise from the hallway adding a melody to Le Va’s pounding bass line. “I wanted to see if you could actually visualize a location through a sound,” Le Va told Marcia Tucker, to whom he described the students watching the piece by following the direction of the sound with their eyes and heads, while they reconstructed the artist’s performance in their minds.[footnote=60]

    The following year, Le Va recreated the work at the La Jolla Museum of Art as Velocity Piece #2. Larry Urrutia had invited him to participate in a group show, which included Robert Barry, David Deutsch, and Sol LeWitt, among others, called “Projections: Anti-Materialism.” Buckminster Fuller’s catalog foreword says it all: “More than 99.9 percent of all the physical and metaphysical events which are evolutionarily scheduled to effect the further regeneration of life aboard our spaceship earth transpire within the vast non-sensorial reaches of the electromagnetic spectrum.”[footnote=61] It was a show about the new nonretinal, and Le Va contributed his most successful elimination of eye intimacy to date.

    Again, the run was executed by the artist and attended only by assistants. But, this time, the piece was extensively documented.[footnote=62] A three-page typed transcription by museum staff member Sharon Fleming details what turns out to have been an extremely elaborate and exhausting process. Everything had to be done at night to ensure that sounds from the street did not interfere with the recording. There were hours worth of technical kinks to be worked out while Le Va performed “dry runs”: “1:44 a.m.—3 mikes used. Le Va runs 6 laps. Quality of replay inadequate.” By the time of the actual event, which was filmed by Urrutia and photographed by Fleming, it’s surprising he had any velocity left.[footnote=63] The final entry reads: “11:43 p.m.—Le Va can no longer continue running. His last lap was timed at 7 seconds, almost double the time of the first lap. The piece has been created. The tape will run for 59 minutes.”[footnote=64]

    At La Jolla, the piece was performed and presented in the museum’s Garden Gallery, a former conservatory that resembled the plan of the Ohio space minus the noisy, student-filled hallway. Without this “substructure,” attention focused less on the location and more on the absent presence of the object crashing back and forth through the room. Writing of the “artist’s presentation of sound as an aesthetic experience unrelated to music,” one critic described “a sound resembling running which seems to be coming from the speaker across the room…[and then] begins to fade away in the distance, and one suddenly hears a thud—as if some invisible object has struck the distant wall.”[footnote=65] In her account of the piece, for one of the first critical essays on “Body Art,” Cindy Nemser called attention to the physical traces of Le Va’s exertions—“the blood spattered walls.”[footnote=66] And she says that “upon hearing the playback recording of his bruised, bloody body plowing into the wall he could not believe it was he who was actually suffering.”[footnote=67] Such blithe self-destruction Nemser found emblematic, in the extreme way the other artists she discussed—Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, Bruce Nauman, Dennis Oppenheim, and William Wegman, among them—were all able to detach themselves from the physical immediacy of working with their own bodies as material. She interpreted their detachment as a “message about the frightening and dangerous aspects of our own society.” As far as his own experience of the piece, Le Va says, “What basically interested me was my psychological response to the sheer physical experience of fatigue and pain.”[footnote=69]

    Le Va does not consider the documentation of Velocity Piece #2 part of the work, although images have been widely reproduced, including making the cover of a recent history, The Artist’s Body.[footnote=70] It might even be argued that within the context of Le Va’s art, the piece is ultimately more about an action and its reconstruction than it is an actual performance. Nevertheless, the only work he made using his own body stands as a major work of endurance art. Installed at ICA, the current version of the piece, titled Impact Run—Energy Drain, is pure sound. Using digital technology, Le Va had the 1969 recording (which seems to have been more successful than the 1970 version) calibrated to fit the specifications of the space. We hear a large man running and hitting the museum wall, pausing, then running, falling, getting up, and running, and his breath is growing more labored, and the leather soles of his shoes slide and squeal along the floor as he slams again into the wall. No visual evidence of his body can be found. The space itself has become a human drain.

     

    Formalistic Violence

    Ever since he dropped glass, with its “inherent visual noise,” into his felt distributions, sound had been part of Le Va’s plan. And now that he had used sound to eliminate “eye intimacy” in the form of material debris, he turned his attention to his art’s underlying actions. Dropping, placing, throwing, all entailed a moment of impact. This he would seek to amplify by using “materials, tools, and activities which are malicious, harmful and violent in nature when associated with flesh or the body.”[footnote=71] This time, however, the results were to be completely bloodless. Starting with the floor of his own studio, he returned to his favorite victim: architecture.

    On one of his trips driving back to Minneapolis from New York in 1969, Le Va picked up a bunch of cleavers. Big, heavy, 3 1/2-pound ones, with 9 1/2-inch-long blades, that he had obtained, appropriately enough, from a butcher supply store around the meat yards of Chicago. Le Va says he was looking for an object that would embody both velocity and impact: “The other alternatives I thought of were axes, which would have been too heavy and pretentious, or knives, which didn’t seem to have enough presence.”[footnote=72] He started by sticking the cleavers into the floor. This made for some pretty vicious-looking distributions, but failed to convey the desired threat of bodily harm. Le Va achieved this with his next move into the realm of figurative reference, by cleaving the blades into the vertical field of the wall.

    Le Va approached working on the wall with cleavers the same as working on the floor with felt—with deliberation. Using the cleavers and the marks made by sticking them into and removing them from the wall, he wanted to create enough of a pattern to induce viewers into reconstructing movement, sequence, and method. Where was the artist (attacker) standing? How were the cleavers thrown? In what order? Some of the plans were quite baroque. A drawing from 1970 calls for hacking out double cloverleaf patterns according to elaborate directions. More simply, the Cleaved Wall installation at ICA is twelve cleavers at floor level. To study their arrangement is to see that they have been put in at roughly one-pace intervals and that they must have been thrown underhand. In other words, to study them is to conjure the artist in action, working to the measure of his own body. This installation relates to the work Le Va contributed to the 1970 Whitney Sculpture Annual: rows of cleavers stuck along both the top and bottom of the wall. To protect against the liability of a cleaver coming unstuck and falling onto a viewer’s head, the museum cordoned off the piece—a measure Le Va considered destructive to the work, since it was, in part, about facing that very danger.

     

    Shattered Glass and Bone

    Between 1969 and 1972, Le Va experimented with different tools of violence. He went from using cleavers (“extensions of the hand”) to bullets (“travel…a short distance with high impact penetration”), to bricks (“crushes”), to glass (“disperses, shatters, cuts”).[footnote=73] It was a timely investigation. Shortly after Le Va executed his impact run at Ohio State, in Columbus, on May 18, 1970, National Guardsmen shot into a crowd of students on Ohio’s Kent State campus, hitting thirteen and killing four. The students, who were protesting the bombing of Cambodia, were all taken at close range. As the war in Vietnam escalated, so did social upheavals across the globe. In America, especially, it seemed that the complacency of the fifties had bred nothing but contempt for the status quo. This was the era of a radicalized Civil Rights movement, women’s liberation, and the youth culture becoming a political force. Violence was bound to occur, and did, with numbing frequency; assassinations, kidnappings, bombings, gassings, hijackings, were the news of the day. In speaking to Elaine King, the curator of his 1988 survey exhibition, no wonder Le Va referred to the late sixties and early seventies “sarcastically as his ‘violent period.’”[footnote=74]

    It would take an act of elimination of more than eye intimacy not to observe a correspondence between Le Va’s most explicitly violent art and its historic context of pervasive social (and cultural) unrest. At the same time, it would be misleading to interpret his art—along with so much of the process-based work of the period involving breakdowns, crack-ups, mutilation, and destruction—as being overtly political. As King writes, “Le Va was not intentionally making statements of social criticism.” Indeed, most of his surveyors have downplayed the violence of his work, especially when the bullets and cleavers start flying. For instance, King takes this moment in her essay to point out that “not all of the works executed during this time were about violence and destruction, even though the materials and procedures involved evoke such associations.”[footnote=75]

    Upon reaching a similar point, Marcia Tucker emphasized Le Va’s interest in theater and movement. He had told her that at school, “Theater interested me the same way street traffic interested me…I suppose I would have liked to direct movement in some way.”[footnote=76] Following this lead, Tucker viewed Cleaved Wall as “extremely theatrical in its final form, although its intentions were of a logical order,” having more to do with physical logic “than to violence per se.”[footnote=77] I see exactly the opposite. Whether it’s suppressed within the plan of an apparently random distribution or as obvious as a meat cleaver hanging overhead, in Le Va’s art, as in life, violence is there. Methodically. Deliberately. Willfully. Inevitably. And without comment.

    An empty envelope that once contained photographs of his cleaver installations is inscribed with some fragmentary notes. These prove useful to understanding more about what Le Va had in mind during his “violent period.” The notes read: “Formalistic Violence: A line becomes fragmentation. A cause becomes a result. An act starts an act. Violence is violence. Cleavers, Bullets, Glass: become each other.”[footnote=78] Thus, it seems that Le Va was considering violence a formal issue, one which, like any other visual question, could be broken down in terms of materials, gestures, lines. Or, as he explains elsewhere, he wanted “to subvert or break down violent associations by emphasizing structure or procedures and locations.”[footnote=79]

    From a formal standpoint alone, the most spectacular work of Le Va’s violent period was installation for documenta 5, the 1972 iteration of the international exhibition held in Kassel, Germany, every five years. Sharing space with works by Nauman (the backside of another corridor) and Ulrich Rückriem (a swag of fabric overhead), Le Va created a seventy-foot causeway of broken glass. A jagged path was left clear for viewers to walk through; what must have first appeared to be a monumental accident, quickly disclosed an intricate and lapidary design. Layers and edges emerge from the visual cacophony of one hundred sheets of glass placed, dropped, and thrown into a carefully composed crepitation of gestures and patterns. Photographs show that Le Va used wooden boards to frame sections and layers of the work in progress. (In these provisional frames, one catches a glimpse of Le Va’s forthcoming “Accumulated Vision” series.) And that he allowed others to pitch in: There is a picture of the dealer Rolf Ricke gleefully tossing a sheet of glass.[footnote=80]

    Not everyone appreciated the work’s intentionality. Robert Pincus-Witten writes how “a negligent administration allowed the work to become damaged, first by hostile workmen who tossed beer bottles into the piece, and then by a public who walked upon the layers of glass, thus disordering every contextual reference of the fragments.”[footnote=81] As it happens, there was hostility on both sides. Le Va’s name is among the ten artists who signed a manifesto that appeared in the June 1972 Artforum.[footnote=82] “Prompted primarily in response to documenta 5, but pertaining to all exhibition conditions,” the statement called for the artist’s right to determine where and in what context his or her art would be shown. (It also demanded that an itemized institutional budget be disclosed, “including allocations to participants, transportation, curatorial fees, etc.”) As an image of protest, tinged with institutional paranoia against the man—or, in this case, men—the manifesto could practically be a work in the show. Organized by a team of four curators, led by Harald Szeeman, this first thematic documenta was conceived as an “Inquiry into Reality—Today’s Imagery.” Art and nonart objects were liberally mixed to picture a reality of images, in which yard gnomes, Coca-Cola trays, and contemporary art were as one. Both critical and utopian, the show fell subject to its own attempts at leveling art-world systems of validation and consumption. Half of the artists that signed the manifesto withdrew their art from the exhibition, including Robert Smithson, whose text against museums appears in the catalog. For the remaining five, the act of protest alone must have been sufficient expression of their autonomy from curatorial authority. For Le Va, the manifesto was an opportunity to register in print his dissatisfaction at having other artists’ work encroach upon his distributional field—and to voice his resistance to outside control of his work in any form.

    Titled Within the Series of Layered Pattern Acts, the documenta 5 installation is named for the subtitle of a series of works that is represented at ICA by On Corner—on Edge—on Center Shatter (Within the Series of Layered Pattern Acts), 1968-71/2005. First installed at the Rolf Ricke Gallery in 1971, with the noisome subtitle Shatterscatter, this work is like a piece of jazz that takes on slight but significant variations every time it is realized. And this goes for its endlessly tweaked title. Of course, improvisation is a fundamental ingredient of every installation (and title) by Le Va. But there’s something about this work in particular—perhaps, simply, that it is relatively easy to interpret. Lay a sheet of untempered, nonsafety window glass on the floor. Now, take an approximately ten-pound sledgehammer, the long-handled kind used in breaking rocks or concrete, and smash the glass in the center. Next, lay another sheet of glass on top of the first. Repeat with sledgehammer. Do this until there is only one sheet of glass remaining. Lay the final sheet on top of the stack, untouched.

    Anywhere between five and twenty sheets of glass may be called for. And there are various ways the artist has of stacking them. But one thing is certain about the Shatterscatter. As Le Va instructed the dealer Daniel Weinberg, “A most important aspect of this work is its location. Preferably by itself….It is an isolated contained act.”[footnote=83] One of his suggestions is a doorway, a location that, when it turns up in a 1969 drawing called Glass Run Piece, makes a shocking connection between the Shatterscatter and Velocity: Impact Run. The annotated drawing shows a doorway covered by two layers of glass, and instructs a man to run through the glass, resulting in “residue in other room or hall.” Returning to the Shatterscatter installation, it’s difficult not to see the cracks as having been created upon impact with a man’s body, even when you know the fact of the matter. (Traces of Duchamp’s fatefully cracked Large Glass are also etched among the fracture lines.)

    Related to Glass Run Piece is another drawing, Bullet Piece, which calls for a violent procedure to take place. This one begins: “Person shoots hand gun trying to get Bullets into hole of pipe (almost impossible).” Not only impossible, dangerous—given that the pipes are sticking up from the floor and the idea is to shoot down into them. Ricocheting bullets multiply by at least another round the factors of impact and velocity that interested Le Va. And, although a bullet ricocheting around a room seems random, it is a sharpshooter’s dream of calculating infinitesimal angles, trajectories, and contact. Shots from the End of a Glass Line, 1970, appears a rococo rendition of single-gun theory. Out of the wall projects a length of metal pipe surrounded by five bullet holes. On the floor, leading up to the target, is a snaking line of shattered glass, like a temptation to shoot the target that shoots back.

    What exactly is involved in shooting a gallery wall? Le Va says that when the piece was first realized in Germany, it was a relatively simple process of calling up the local police, who fired directly into the wall, which was made of solid plaster construction. At ICA, after the installation was approved by the university, bulletproof vests were stuffed inside the Sheetrock wall, and tactical commander Joseph Hasara, a professional sniper and Penn security guard, did the job. Compared to the noise—each shot reverberated through the building for minutes afterward—the holes themselves are fairly anticlimactic. Bullets whistle through Sheetrock as cleanly as a drill bit; it was the shattered plywood behind the vests that really took the impact. “I don’t want anyone to get killed,” Le Va said.[footnote=84] This, presumably, is what makes the violence in his work formalistic—its impossible procedures and highly controlled choreography. Death, however, was an unmitigated part of the plan in two works where violence slips the leash. Pity the unfortunate, who does not die from the hundred-foot drop into the tapering pit specified in the drawing for Slow Death Zone. Presented as the conceptual work Slow Death Piece at Rolf Ricke, in 1971, it consisted of a taped off location on the floor, just inside of a doorway—a threshold to approach with caution (and dread) in Le Va’s art. Truck Event, 1970, was his response to an invitation to propose a project to take place on a London pier.[footnote=85] Notes on the drawing call for five “heavy duty diesel transport trucks with double trailers” to back up the length of the pier at full speed. If the jackknifing rigs didn’t kill the drivers, the carbon monoxide fuming up the enclosed pier would have done the trick.

     

    Elementary

    Beginning in 1970, a remarkable year for Le Va, his art entered a range of contexts. It was exhibited for the first time in Europe, at Galerie Rolf Ricke, in Cologne. After sketching the possibilities of filling the gallery with lumps of coal or tons of powdered concrete, or perhaps shooting out all the windows with a high-powered rifle, the artist settled on making his international debut with this duet: Float, a flour distribution, and Shots from the End of a Glass Line. In April, a new aspect of Le Va’s art came to light in the hallway of another Ohio college, this time Oberlin’s Allen Art Museum.[footnote=86] In response to all the new art that called out to be read like a book, the curator Athena Spear invited artists to submit text and photobased works for publication in a catalog that ended up constituting a good portion of the show. An unbound copy of Art in the Mind was “exhibited on the walls of a well frequented corridor in the Art Building.”[footnote=87] Twelve pages were dedicated to Le Va’s Fictional Excerpts, a typewritten text that lifted four lines from every hundredth page of The Complete Sherlock Holmes. It was a typed confession of his addiction to Holmes, who was, in any case, the perfect inducement to thinking about “Art in the Mind.” A man incapable of mere retinal pleasure, Holmes told his partner, “I am a brain, Watson. The rest of me is a mere appendix.”[footnote=88] And he advised Watson to attempt to do the same, to use his mind in order “to see” what others just “observed.” In quoting from Sherlock Holmes, Le Va also prompted a detective reading of his own work. The sentence—“One night my cries brought Leonardo to the door of our van. We were near tragedy”—breaks off the action as puzzlingly as any other arrangement of fragments in Le Va’s art.[footnote=89]

    “Art in the Mind” ran before “Information,” which opened, in July 1970, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, with another text-based work by Barry Le Va. This one consists of a single page of six short Notes for Possible Pieces. One note, for instance, reads: “A ROLLING MASS OF PARTLY CONDENSED WATER VAPOR, DUST, AND ASH, HIGHLY CHARGED WITH ELECTRICITY.” Based on the geographic definitions he was beginning to mine around the time of the Walker installation, it was typed, as all of these pieces were, on Minneapolis College of Art letterhead. (Once the incriminating address was removed, the stationery left Le Va with a readymade frame, elegantly pin-lined in gray ink.) Read as specifications, Le Va’s notes warrant one aspect of the anxiety roused in the curator by works that, for example, consisted of asphalt dumped over a hillside, imagining clouds dripping, push-ups on mud. In his catalog essay for what is considered the first full-scale, institutional treatment of conceptual art, the curator, Kynaston McShine, surmised: “What is the traditional museum going to do about work at the bottom of the Sargasso Sea?”[footnote=90]

    Lead an expedition outdoors. Shortly after Le Va moved permanently to New York, in August 1970, he participated by long-distance in one of the first major outdoor exhibitions of site-specific art. Organized in and around Minneapolis by the Minnesota State Arts Council, “9 Artists/9 Spaces” produced pandemonium to match the conundrums of MoMA’s “Information” and the affronts of the Whitney’s “Anti-Illusion.” A billboard by William Wegman was taken down on the university campus after the FBI considered it a bomb threat. A neon sculpture by Fred Escher was removed from its spot after local African Americans protested its lack of relevance to their community. Ron Brodigan’s sculpture was destroyed by “some restless young people gaily bedecked with their long hair and beads,” for interfering with their park.[footnote=91] A letter to Le Va from guest curator Richard Koshalek assured the artist that his work, Landscape View, was still on view.[footnote=92] But there were some problems when the land it was located on was discovered not to belong to the man living in a nearby trailer. He was the one who gave them permission to use the property.

     

    Stone Cold

    Landscape View consisted of three stepped concrete platforms set in the terrain. The site, Le Va specified in his notes, should be “isolated, hard to find.” The steps, located roughly one thousand feet apart from one another, should be “discovered, stumbled upon, while walking in the area.” Le Va envisioned the platforms as recontextualized urban locations “minus architectural structures, noise, population, transportation, etc.,” and as activators of a human scale.[footnote=93] To come across the steps, lying stone cold in the grass, would be a mysterious and vaguely disturbing experience. To mount the steps would be to assert your body and its measure over the landscape, while rising into view, like a target. To step down from the steps would be to deactivate the piece, which would disappear again into the landscape. At the close of 1970, Le Va was making notes for Stone Step: Twenty-six, another outdoor project, this one to be realized as a film—the beginning of several film projects by Le Va, most unrealized. The action of Stone Step consisted of Le Va throwing a medium-size stone, then taking a number of steps away from it, and marking the spot with a “clear, decisive footprint.” The action was to be repeated twenty-six times, with the number of steps, direction of throws, etc., to be “decided when time to do the piece.” Whatever the variables, the “entire situation would be scattered over vast area of ground”—ground marked by some more or less discernible pattern of footprints and stones. The action would be shot in color from two perspectives: close-up, showing just the artist’s hands, and far away, reducing the action to “about the size of a pin.” Both views were to be projected side by side at “slightly slower than normal speed and with a soundtrack.”[footnote=94]

    Le Va was planning to realize this project on his next trip to Germany, working with the visionary filmmaker and dealer Gerry Schum. Schum’s mission was to turn every West German home with a television into an art gallery by broadcasting films and videos by artists—many of whom might not have otherwise ventured into the medium.[footnote=95] His video gallery first aired in April 1968 with a program called “Land Art.” Le Va worked with Schum and his partner, Ursula Wevers, in their souped-up, high-tech Mercedes van on another film project. Despite the simplicity of its conception—a metal bar appears stationary although it is actually being carried parallel to the ground—the piece turned into an endurance feat for Schum of handheld steady camera work. Listed in several exhibition catalogs, the work was never completed or shown,[footnote=96] nor, says Le Va, were any of his film or video projects, because they proved too costly, complex, painful, or dangerous.

    The first attempt at filming Stone Step, Le Va says, was with a Hollywood cameraman who offered to do the work for free, until Le Va decided to cast twenty-six extras instead of doing the action himself. The artist admits that his script for a forty-minute film of a woman’s mouth reciting a list of numbers, according to a ridiculously impossible rule (which might not even have been followed), would have been unbearable torture for all involved. Four tapes syncopated into one video of a woman loudly slapping her stomach was never finished: The woman refused to submit to the necessary retaping. Le Va’s potentially most lethal unrealized work in this vein centered on a cleaver being rapidly stuck and removed from between the outspread fingers of a hand lying on a table covered with powder that would billow up and obscure the action.[footnote=97] As performative as they were, none of these projects was intended to be seen as documentation—a form that Le Va consistently rejected; it simplified, down to a picture, art that had to be experienced as a form of complexity. Rather, they comprise a discrete investigation of “certain filmic issues,”[footnote=98] presumably those having to do with sequence, narrative, and location—structural issues consistent with his work as a whole.

     

    Evidence of Past Occurrences

    As in film, establishing location is an important aspect of Le Va’s work, one that he has researched extensively using photography. “I think a lot of my ideas come from experiencing different kinds of spaces and what goes on in them,” he says.[footnote=99] Since moving to Minneapolis in 1968, he had adopted the habit of scouting the city and surrounding countryside with his 35mm camera in tow, looking for places with “a ring of science fiction to them: places where particular events occur and then dissolve into the environment.”[footnote=100] Places like parking lots and underground garages, seedy city parks and spaces that feel like someplace between here and there. These subjects form Le Va’s ongoing picture research, a process that tends to pick up momentum whenever he travels to Europe, which he routinely does. Returning from his first trip, in 1969, he reported: “Was impressed by European trains and layout of cities. Looked at no art.”[footnote=101] There are many journeys worth of photographs of empty hotel lobbies and blurred landscape views taken through the windows of moving cars and trains. For a number of years, he has made it a project to get out at every station, stand on the platform, and shoot the tracks. Recently, his photographs, which have been accumulating in boxes, envelopes, and albums to form a scattered picture archive at his studio, have been making their way into his “scrapbook” projects and photocollage drawings.

    Around the same time he started taking photographs, Le Va was developing a text-based work with a similar purpose in mind, called Fiction. Each typewritten page reads exactly like it was composed, as fragments streamed and gleaned from newspapers, the radio, and other media. For example: “MATTER IN THE CENTER OF THE GALAXY IS EITHER COLLAPSING OR BEING REARRANGED ON A GRAND SCALE…37 STEPS. $10,000. A DAY…ON CHINESE WRITING…FROM ONE OF THE STONE WALLS 400 ARMS PROJECTED AT THE POINTS NEAREST THE BROKEN SLABS…FLOORED SMOOTH…VEST POCKET OPTICAL SYSTEM.” Littered with the kind of information that captures Le Va’s attention, the work is an imagery of incidents and locations that never settle into place. Even the contents are fluid: Pages can be added or subtracted and still constitute a complete work of Fiction.

    Le Va called this text “a science fiction novel in which thoughts are assigned fluctuating positions in space.”[footnote=102] Referring to his photographs in the same manner, Le Va may have had something more specific in mind than just “a ring of science fiction.”[footnote=103] As much as books serve as studio references, so do films. Le Va recently replaced his much-viewed video of Jean-Luc Godard’s Alphaville with a DVD copy. Equal parts science fiction, detective novel, and comic strip, this 1965 French New Wave film instantly entered the cultural currency. (See, for instance, artist Mel Bochner’s Alfaville, Godard’s Apocalypse (Project for a Magazine), in the May 1968 issue of Arts Magazine.) Hardboiled, gun-toting private detective Lemmy Caution is sent to the Outlands to destroy the computer Alpha 60 that controls a dystopic future in which any form of human tenderness is punishable by death. This future, filmed in black and white, mostly at night, looks nightmarishly familiar. It’s the everyday reality that Le Va captures in his photographs—photographs in which light becomes the fugitive element by glaring artificially out of darkness or dimness, and flaring up and ricocheting off reflective surfaces. The perfect narrator of Le Va’s Fiction would be the croaking mechanical voice of Alpha 60.

    Cultural critic Ross Gibson writes about a photograph from a forensic archive, trying to deduce what makes the picture of a tree and a sidewalk so disturbing: “For as long as I look at it or remember it, this image unsettles me in the way its composition is so brittle, ready as it is to craze at several points of stress.”[footnote=104] Whatever it is, Le Va frames it, too, often by strictly enforcing the laws of perspective. Looking down a railroad platform, the intersecting tracks and overhead wires appear prone to a disastrously wrong switch. Peering into the gloom of a basement hallway, the dumpster hides as much as it contains. This is no science fiction, just the ordinary stress of seeing something could happen here—if it hasn’t already occurred.

     

    Maiden Lake

    Something is definitely going on in three photographic series that Le Va directed. Working with his companion at the time, Carol Sullivan, Le Va instructed her to move in a straight line through grass, brush, and water, while he shot Surface Crawl. He considered the images Muybridgelike studies of motion. For Forest Run, he had her dart into the woods. More research: “I wanted to take a vast situation such as a forest…and create an awareness of its constituent elements—volumes, edges, height, width—by means of a specific act.”[footnote=105] The third series, Extensions, shot in the summer of 1971 on the shores of Maiden Lake, Wisconsin, however, became a photographic work in its own right.[footnote=106] Sets of pictures of a woman’s hands and feet are laid out in grids—“poppy seed” style—with no readily discernible sequence or correspondence. Even when you know what’s going on—first, the artist posed the hands, then he photographed the feet wherever they happened to be—It’s impossible to put the hands and feet together; Le Va shot them at thoroughly incompatible angles. Lying in the grass, grabbing at tree trunks, floating in the water, the limbs have been spliced from the woman’s body. In its absence, a person might think of another female nude sprawled in the grass, the one in Duchamp’s secret last work, Etant Donnés. Discovered in the studio after his death, this disturbing tableau went on view for the first time in 1969, when it was permanently installed at the Philadelphia Museum of Art—around the time Le Va started working with a woman in the woods.

     

    Practice Range

    The diversity of Le Va’s practice around 1970—taking photographs, conducting research, typing, drawing, making installations indoors and out, working with a range of materials that included his own body—was essentially the practice of the day. One can quickly garner this from an essay Lucy Lippard wrote in 1985, “Intersections,” which looks back on the period she critically helped to shape.[footnote=107] Lippard describes an intensely experimental culture in which the general deemphasis on form “led to the kind of literalism that also made dictionary and thesaurus definitions popular.” There was “much talk about serial relationships—one to one to one” and “a mania for math books.” Artists were “making ‘invisible pieces’ that emphasized and/or incorporated the room itself,” then using words to say what was there. Artists were “replacing the ‘furniture’ of art with place,” and making art by performing everyday tasks and procedures. Deadpan objects (like guns), B movies, science fiction, geological time, duration, and boundaries all enter into Lippard’s account of the general consciousness of artists whose collective aim it was “to expand the axes and vortices of art into the ‘real world.’”[footnote=108]

     

    One-man Operation

    Le Va seemed to be operating within the context Lippard outlined, in every way but one. He wasn’t interested in making his art part of the “real world.” He was interested in working in his studio—a space contained not by four walls but by the issues and problems inherent to his work, wherever and however he created it. When pressed by Avalanche interviewer Liza Béar to discuss his recent work in relation to outdoor projects by Dennis Oppenheim and Robert Smithson, Le Va responded briskly. “I think the photographs I was taking related to my own interests more than to Oppenheim’s or Smithson’s work—scale, perspective, the lay of the land, or evidence of past occurrences.” As far as he was concerned, Le Va was carrying out his work in a field that had been greatly expanded by postminimalist practices, but he was not one of its practitioners. Lately, he wasn’t even sure about making art. After being hospitalized with cancer, Le Va entered the year 1971 by moving through a slow zone of recovery. He told Béar that he had just “spent four months watching TV, taking tranquilizers, and drinking whiskey.” (“Goodness,” she demurred.) And now he was contemplating leaving the studio entirely. “Maybe I’ll go around the city and stage little crimes, he joked.[footnote=110] Fortunately, his work had already embarked on its next trajectory.

    In The Life of Forms in Art, the French art historian Henri Focillon argues the limits of visual knowledge: “[Man] does not measure space with his eyes, but with his hands and feet.”[footnote=111] Artists, especially, he writes, understand this. “Without hands there is no geometry, for we need straight lines and circles to speculate on the properties of extension.”[footnote=112] As if demonstrating Focillon’s theory, Barry Le Va’s photographs of hands and feet extend into a realm of pure geometry.

     

    Connecting the Dots

    Beginning with simple circles on the floor and developing into complex three-point perspective in space, Le Va created a series of installations during the seventies based on geometry. These installations consisted of largely empty rooms, in which some form of physical marker had been distributed to indicate a process or plan. “Of course it’s essential for people to know the title, or it doesn’t make sense,” Le Va reasoned.[footnote=113]

    Even so, these works were deliberate challenges to the art of mental reconstruction. In his written instructions on how to install Intersection: 7 Circles, 3 Varying Sizes, all Tangent only to Two opposite (opposing) walls. None to both, Le Va precisely specified the arrangement of circles to be drawn in chalk (“white or whatever is easiest”) and the eighteen points of intersection to be marked. The markers (1 3/8″ in diameter) could be wood, or they could be “stone grinding gears…they have a little hole in the middle (very small).” Anything but metal, which “I would prefer to stay away from.”[footnote=114] Once the points were marked, every trace of chalk was to be cleaned of “(absolutely) all traces of drawing procedure.” The perpetrator of Le Va’s piece was then instructed to “place a small title card on wall in space—5 x 7″ or smaller, whatever is usually done in group shows like this.”[footnote=115]

    There were no telltale chalk lines to erase from the “Traveling Lengths” series, which Le Va introduced with his first New York one-artist exhibition, at Bykert Gallery, in 1973. (Gallery director Klaus Kertess was cocurator of the aforementioned group exhibition at Yale University.[footnote=116]) These works marked their own procedure. Walked end-over-end, a wooden dowel, of specified length, was shortened by a segment every time it touched the floor. Think of it as “impact run, energy drain” for sticks (or tallies), which, unlike people, travel with increasing velocity the closer they get to being completely run down. And while it may be easy to discern that one stick had petered out in its peregrinations around the room, imagine trying to reconstruct the route of 12 lengths in 3 areas: walked zig-zag, walked end over end. (Ends touch; ends cut). Such was the subtitle of the Bykert installation. From photographs, it looks like an explosion in a hockey puck factory.

    As much as they describe procedures and actions, these works were, for Le Va, not about systems. At least, not in any fixed sense of the word. But not all systems turn out the same way each time they are applied. There are relational systems, as Marcia Tucker discovered when she picked up a well-worn book about advanced physics at Barry Le Va’s studio.[footnote=117] In his copy of Hans Reichenbach’s The Philosophy of Space and Time, Tucker found a passage tellingly underlined: a definition of “content” as “‘the system of relations common to a given set of symbolic systems.’”[footnote=118] By extension, she deduces the content of Le Va’s works that use geometry to such elusive ends. As he confirmed, “If there is any point of view in the work as a whole, it’s relational. To change one thing is to change the whole thing….People assume it’s a system, but it’s not. However, within the construction or operation of the work, there are clues to every decision made, and to why it’s been made.” [footnote=119]In other words, these works create the image of a system at work without creating a working system—at least, not one that anyone could envision or control but Barry Le Va.

    The notion of contingencies constantly at work, and beyond one’s control, is dangerous and unsettling, as Le Va’s drawings make apparent. Circling a room inevitably results in cutting intersections. Sticks zigzagging and arcing their way at varying rates of speed are bound to collide. For Le Va, there was more than geometry at stake: “I am always conscious of different rates of people walking at the same time… they all have their own tracks…but they are also mentally in proximity to me…is this person or thing going to crash into this other person or thing, is this person going to shoot this person?”[footnote=120]

    Suddenly, the dots become victims, as the dots of humanity did in this passage from another of Le Va’s studio references, the 1949 film The Third Man. “Look down there. Would you really feel any pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever? If I offered you twenty thousand pounds for every dot that stopped, would you really, old man, tell me to eat my money—or would you calculate how many dots you could afford to spend?” Chilling words written by Graham Greene and spoken by Orson Welles’s character Harry Lime, who has been selling fatally watered-down penicillin in postwar Vienna. The scene was shot from high atop a Ferris wheel, a contraption that some of these drawings of Le Va’s inadvertently resemble. “All about collision and interruptions and disruptions,” is how he describes these ambulatory networks, which demonstrate the almost mathematical probability for violence to erupt.[footnote=121] Not that this should be any cause for alarm. Le Va observes, “It’s catastrophic because it changes something. Not necessarily because the results are catastrophic. These are unrelated things that become related by proximity.”[footnote=122]

    At ICA, three different relational systems collide in a single installation called Circular Network: Objects 1971, Area 1972, Activities 1973. When first compiled in 1988, for a survey exhibition of his work at the Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller, the piece wheeled over two distinct areas. Concrete blocks marking Centerpoints and Lengths and Intersecting Circles sat adjacent to the wooden logs representing Traveling Lengths. Now, at ICA, all three areas are superimposed, like the vellum overlays of a mechanical drawing. Indeed, in the process of reconfiguring it to suit the proportions of the second-floor gallery, Le Va returned to his working drawings for a 1990 installation of the piece, using this version to generate a new set of graphite-on-vellum plans. This hybrid installation raises the issue of reconstruction, another area, like photography, rife with questions and potential gray zones in Le Va’s art.

     

    Reconstructing the Scene

    Hardware-store materials and cheap lumber gave Le Va’s installations of the seventies a scrappy look that is at odds with today’s beefy manifestation. When asked about this by Kröller-Müller curator Marianne Brouwer, Le Va said, “I wanted to find out whether they still hold as markers, or whether they have become so much of an object that the underlying network is not important anymore.”[footnote=123] Thus, Le Va has maintained the mutability of his work on every level, including his shifting interests in relationship to it, along with his abiding interest in control. “If the drawings are scripts or scores, they are for me to improve on,” Le Va recently said in an interview with his friend the artist Saul Ostrow.[footnote=124] “I don’t trust other people’s critical decisions about installing my earlier work. I’m the controlling factor and I don’t like relinquishing control. This is true even with the recent works, which can be set up by someone else, but that’s only because they come with a set of floor plans with exact measurements and instructions.”[footnote=125]

     

    A Maze of Thought

    The most difficult of Le Va’s works to reconstruct belong to the “Accumulated Vision” series for which this exhibition is named. Like all the installations of the seventies based on invisible geometry, these involve some minimal means of marking points in space. In this case, sticks on the floors and the walls indicate angles of perspective. And although they appear relatively simple—even straightforwardly constructivist—the drawings for these works belie an almost bizarre degree of complexity and subjectivity at work. Drawn diagrammatically and in perspective, the space appears as a cubic mass penetrated by lines projected from various points outside of it. It’s an application of the research he conducted with Forest Run, research on a volume being broken down by a pathway through it. But, now, there are many, many paths being drawn simultaneously and from points above and below, as well as directly outside of the volume/room. Marks have been made to connect these lines at specific intersections and angles. And it is the designation of these networks, or sites of accumulated vision, that the wooden sticks correspond to in the actual installation.

    The drawings for “Accumulated Vision” also show how intensely Le Va worked and reworked these studies to arrive at an approach—and only an approach, since, of course, the actual installation would be subject to change. A group of six drawings, from what could easily be a series of three times as many more (judging from the numbering in their titles), shows relational content in action. Each time a point changes position, all of the networks shift. The sequence appears animated by Le Va’s quest for an installation plan. The final drawing reveals his objective: a condensation of marks arranged evenly and not too dynamically throughout the space. Even as drawings, these works are much more computational than Le Va’s studies of circles, tangents, and traveling lengths. These geometries were evidently based on the mechanics of compasses and T-squares—tools that extend the artist’s eye to his hand. But the “Accumulated Vision” series goes straight to the mind, demanding that we engage in a form of mental surveying—a kind of cubist activity—that attempts to line up variables within space, which are fluctuating even while we attempt to analyze them. No wonder Le Va himself is the first to acknowledge of the “Accumulated Visions,” “They are almost too complicated to talk about, because their compounded perspectives form a maze of information—a maze of thought.”[footnote=126]

    In an era of high tolerance for seemingly empty galleries and the enigmas they entailed, the critical reception for Le Va’s “Accumulated Vision” series was just short of irate. Writing favorably, in 1973, of “Traveling Lengths,” critic Kenneth Baker appreciated the challenge of Le Va’s work for viewers: “We are becoming very sophisticated, through shows such as this, in the use of ‘neutral’ artistic situations which tend to minimize incident and coach our perceptions in the most subtle and testing of ways.”[footnote=127] But even the most avid aficionados of what Baker dubbed the “low key perceptual arena” were stumped by Barry Le Va’s “Accumulated Vision” installations. As critic David Bourdon summed up his experience in the title of a 1976 review: “Is This a Geometry Class?”[footnote=128]

     

    Impenetrable Web

    The first “Accumulated Vision” to be shown in New York was also Le Va’s first exhibition at Sonnabend Gallery, in January 1976. Nancy Foote begins her Artforum review by stepping straight “into two scatterings of wooden dowels” and marching up to the wall label.[footnote=129] There, she found the information she was looking for—sort of. “A notice explained that the sticks represent sightings, taken from points below the floor, along lines demarcated by the dowels and projected on the wall. This information conjures up an image of Le Va, downstairs [from Sonnabend] in the Castelli Gallery, standing on a stepladder, and, with X-ray vision, penetrating the ceiling/floor to delineate the resulting angles.”[footnote=130] Trying to envision this complicated setup, Foote writes, “I found myself increasingly sucked into the piece—bending, leaning, squatting and squinting to try to figure out what marked what.”[footnote=131] Only after she resorts to asking for help does she learn the futility of her investigation. “It turns out that Le Va took his hypothetical measurements, recorded them with sticks, and then packed up the dowels and moved to another spot!” The drawings, which “spelled out the results that remained so elusive in the actual installation,” confirm her suspicion. The artist was messing with his audience. And the audience didn’t appreciate it. Foote concludes, “l came away…with the feeling that he may have outsmarted himself as well, becoming so involved in multiplying the layers of complications that he lost his grip on the overall results.”[footnote=132]

    For Le Va, this was exactly the point. He says of the labels, “Though it’s simple enough information that’s being presented—you can’t retain it because the concepts overlap and cancel each other out.”[footnote=133] And, as Foote found out, even if you could figure it out, the concepts had subsequently been short-circuited during installation by the artist himself. Having canceled out the possibility of a system or solution, Le Va leads the viewer to experience complication for its own sake. One imagines the lines shooting off from the wooden markers creating a tangled web, like the one Duchamp actually made using a mile of string to render the installation of a 1942 exhibition impenetrable. Or, given Le Va’s record of past violence to buildings, the invisible lines may be seen to map a hail of bullets fired through the walls, floors, and ceiling by high-powered weapons, ultimately destroying the gallery and anyone who happened to be inside. Even from the perspective of pure draftsmanship, the tracery of lines projected within an “Accumulated Vision” quickly turns from reverie into brutality. Architecture is extinguished by such relentless penetration and absurd complexity. And here we arrive at the crux of the matter: In the critical heyday of constructed space, Le Va’s installations would only frustrate viewers who attempted to piece together what was on every level a work of deconstruction.

     

    False Clues

    After they failed her as leads, Nancy Foote categorized the wooden sticks in the first “Accumulated Vision” as “red herrings,” or false clues.[footnote=134] Suddenly, it seemed every viewer was a gumshoe, primed to solve a mystery, often based on directives from the artists themselves.[footnote=135] For instance, in an essay entitled “Mystery Under Construction,” Alice Aycock compared her outdoor sculptures to archaeological sites, haunted by events that called out to be reconstructed.[footnote=136] A 1976 installation by Dennis Oppenheim is actually entitled Search for Clues. Detective metaphors had been part of Le Va’s work since he purloined lines from Sherlock Holmes to make Fictional Excerpts. In 1977, he returned to his mystery library, this time taking a page from Ellery Queen, literally, and inserting it, like a textual found object, into the catalog that accompanied his installation of Accumulated Vision: extended boundaries at the Wright State University Art Gallery, in Dayton, Ohio.[footnote=137]

    As opposed to the literature of Holmes, Ellery Queen was pulp fiction written to an addictive formula of suspects and clues that always culminated in a one-page “Challenge to the Reader.” Le Va enjoyed the game in these books as much as the time travel back to noir New York they offered. The appropriated page in question comes from The French Powder Mystery, of 1930, a mystery that hinged on things that were significant by their sheer absence from among the clues, which included, coincidental to Le Va, a bullet, fingerprint powder, and felt. But when “silken Cinderella” Marion French is found dead, where is the “divine ichor, which by all laws of physics…should have gushed forth”?[footnote=138] To prompt the reader to look for what was missing, a one-page definition of the word “clue” appears, cribbed from a criminology handbook and inserted into the novel, like a page in a police file. And so it appears in Le Va’s catalog, performing a similar function, to remind viewers challenged by the mystery of “Accumulated Vision” that a clue “in the detectival sense” is both tangible and intangible: “It may derive from the absence of a relevant object as well as from the presence of an irrelevant one….But always, whatever the nature, a clue is the thread which guides the crime investigator through the labyrinth of nonessential data into the light of complete comprehension.”[footnote=139] Or, complete incomprehension, as is the case with Le Va’s “Accumulated Vision” installations and their deliberately broken threadwork of clues.

    In 1978, Le Va introduced Accumulated Vision—Blocked, an installation featuring barrierlike elements that ostensibly obstructed the passage of information through them. In art, this baffling notion relates to Duchamp’s “Stoppages”—his 1913 experiments using dropped pieces of thread to challenge (or block) the concept of a straight line. In life, this imagery of obstruction corresponds to the real-life detective story that had recently unfolded over the Watergate scandal—a story of spying and surveillance that left the whole country washed in paranoia, itself a form of destructive illogic. If the president couldn’t distinguish between national security and his own obsession with illegal information-gathering, who could draw (or, again, block) the line? To look at Le Va’s “Accumulated Vision” and not factor in the elements of deception and disruption, distrust and paranoia, is to miss out on the frustrating truth that violating our trust as viewers was just part of the plan.

     

    Wet Newspaper

    The end of the “Accumulated Vision” series marked the completion of Le Va’s agenda to reduce art to his own terms. Eye intimacy, contained mass, horizontal scale, were all successfully wiped out by works that compounded the impossibility of seeing what was being indicated by a distribution of sticks and boards around a room, with fresh information, borne by the title; some of what was (or wasn’t) there was actually blocked from view. Appropriately enough, Le Va concluded this investigation as part of the first museum survey of his work, which opened, in December 1978, at the New Museum, in New York. Organized by Marcia Tucker, the museum’s new founding director and Le Va’s supporter since their California days, the exhibition was also one of the last institutional expressions in its day of process art. And, since its museum debut in 1969, it was more poorly received than ever by the mainstream press.

    Curmudgeon extraordinaire Hilton Kramer groused in the New York Times about every aspect, save that part of the show on view at the Parsons School of Design, where, if you went during the appointed hours, you could be fairly sure of seeing a survey of drawings by Barry Le Va.[footnote=140] Not so at the museum, where four installations were presented sequentially, making it impossible to know what, if anything, would be there to see, especially since the museum hours were also “uncertain at times.”[footnote=141] Le Va is described as “an artist who executes so-called ‘on-site’ installations, upon which some critics confer the honorary name of sculpture.” Kramer, in detective mode, doubts that “a pair of shoes and a very damp newspaper (it was a rainy day)” are part of the installation, “but then again, without information from the artist, who could tell for sure.” The review concludes: “ So if you want to know where the tattered old banner of avant-garde aspiration still waves at the end of the 70’s, this is apparently its current address.”[footnote=142]

    Hilton Kramer’s rhetoric is, well, Hilton Kramer’s rhetoric—always useful for exaggerating one’s point. The review is a sneering testament to why Le Va has always been so resistant to having his work interpreted in a group context. Without writing one word about Le Va’s work specifically—what did it look like? What, exactly, was it about? Why was it or was it not interesting? ––Kramer dismissed the entire exhibition as the last flutter of life from a (thankfully) bygone movement. On the other hand, despite Le Va’s nearly dogmatic claim that he and he alone was responsible for his creations, nobody works in a vacuum. Perhaps it’s because of the degree that he protested and rallied so strongly against it that his work cannot be seen without factoring in its postminimalist context. Now, the good news: According to the Times obituary, postminimalism was dead, leaving all of its practitioners free to strike out on their own—or forcing them into obscurity. For Le Va, this was the moment he had been working toward: Having eliminated any vestige of what makes “traditional works of art, art” (including, it seems, an audience), he was ready to start rebuilding, “on my terms, with nobody else’s influence.”[footnote=143]

     

    Casing the Joint

    Typically, it’s easier to tear something down than build something up. Not the case with Barry Le Va’s art.  It’s as if, through a concerted, more than decadelong process of elimination, he had been identifying his work’s objectives. Starting around 1980, all the interests and strategies that he had been pursuing towards destructive ends, now begin to resonate as positive means. Of course, this entails major contradictions. Most conspicuously, whereas Le Va had once disdained the practice of art as object-making, his installation-based works now appear blatant works of sculpture––sculpture in which horizontal scale, order, and instability all play a role, but sculpture just the same. So, too, changes the role of process in relation to these works.

    In this catalog, each illustration of Le Va’s early installations is presented with a battery of notes, sketches, and related documentation, providing a sense of the physical actions and conceptual process these works represent. After 1980, however, as the work becomes increasingly more self-contained, the role of process changes, becoming absorbed into the making of the work itself. Process continues to play a critical role in Le Va’s art, although the conceptualism of Duchamp and the calculations of Holmes both disappear, henceforth, as points of reference. Le Va, an artist who is constantly drawing, specifying, adding, subtracting, tweaking, ripping, kicking, and otherwise doing whatever it takes to keep his work in flux and under his control, remained true to a process-based approach and to process in general.

     

    Architecture 

    His process of rebuilding begins, naturally, with architecture. Starting with the series of “Expanding Foundations; Eliminating Foundations,” Le Va’s work in the eighties transforms the invisible geometry of the seventies into fully constructed and ambiguous circumstances. Just the idea of an expanding foundation conjures a frightening sensation of the ground shifting below one’s feet—as it must have seemed to viewers while standing on the powdery precipice of Extended Vertex—and of dropping through space. And so do these installations of low-lying channels, running along the floor, butting into walls, and passing through doorways make it unclear how to position oneself, where to stand, and whether it is permissible to walk among them.

    “I think the history of sculpture should involve the notion of city planning,”[footnote=144] Le Va has said of his interest in formally studying the relationship between physical movement and location. When the Fairmount Park Art Association, in Philadelphia, invited him to come up with an outdoor project, Le Va looked at the available plazas (too many trees) and selected instead a bleak stretch along Front Street.[footnote=145] There, he proposed to build a concrete corridor that would engage pedestrians in the perceptual game of walking toward a wall with a window that framed a view to the next of three corridors. As elegant as the renderings show it to be, the prospect of this corridor as urban space has more than a ring of science fiction—where events occur and dissolve. It’s the perfect stage for little crimes. Each transitional wall stands to screen an unsavory encounter along the pathway. Needless to say, the 1981 proposal was shelved.

     

    Encryption

    Constructed in galleries, for the most part, from inexpensive building materials, the installations of the early eighties saw the introduction of fabricated elements: spun aluminum spheres and plaster cylinders that sat on top of, or were framed within, the horizontal tracks. They contained movement as it had been implied in the “Circular Networks,” researched in Surface Crawl, and was now articulated by Le Va as an  “abstraction of general activities of the kind that is always going on around you, interfering, interrupting that which you are doing…But it’s not people or activities, it’s balls now. You don’t know what’s going on, you don’t have a standard to make them clear, so they become a kind of confusion.”[footnote=146] The confusion was intentional, of course. Le Va considered these works encoded situations; one installation could represent the same situation encoded three different ways.[footnote=147] What kinds of situations did he have in mind? The phrasing of the titles suggests ones in which there is an element of contingency—“Revolving Standards,” “Standard Tasks,” “Observation, Isolation, Examination,” “Future Drops,” “X-Ray Perspective”—but keeps things vague. Which is, no doubt, how Le Va wanted it. But when you have information, you have to use it. In conversation with the artist, Saul Ostrow refers to this period of “work based on walking around hospital corridors.”[footnote=148] Le Va, whose health is always at issue, spent the year 1985 recuperating from open-heart surgery. So with a mind towards decoding, we now may regard these installations as being not exactly situations of life and death but harsh approximations of the tedium, confusion, powerlessness, and dread that come when the two are in the balance.

     

    Debris

    Barry Le Va has always made consistently good use of his scraps; after all, he launched a whole career by taking note of what fell on the floor. Stenciling through and around cut paper, too, is another related mainstay of his practice. In the eighties, he merged the two—scraps and stencils—to arrive at a new approach to his work on paper. “Most artists see collages as a painting notion…I see collages basically as a building notion.” [footnote=149]The building of Plan View from Ceiling Observer/Participant Part of One/Part of the Other, 1983, began by rolling yellow printers’ ink over the entire sheet. Indeed, no actual painting was involved: While the surface was being built up in layers of darker ink, stencils and masking tape were used to create lines and silhouettes. Applied to the surface are sculptural forms, cut from heavy paper, and then inked. The resulting construction, viewed up close, is a work on paper with topography.  Speaking of these works with Marianne Brouwer, the artist said, “To me the whole thing is positively built on negative impressions.”[footnote=150] The same might be said of Le Va’s entire oeuvre.

     

    Negative Impressions

    These works on paper started large, and they got bigger. The diptych Diagrammatic Silhouettes: Sculptured Activities (TB Rust), 1988, is a gaping maw that opens up whatever wall it hangs on like rusted gates from hell. It is part of a series that appears to flip, turn, repeat, rotate, and shuffle the movement of disks and cylinders moving on tracks in a form of visual playback––complete with its own static of squiggly lines filling the background––of the movements and objects Le Va had been working with in his installations. He recycled the imagery again to create eight sets of woodblock prints. You can almost feel Le Va bridling against the rules of mechanical reproduction, as it pertains to printmaking; instead of making eight identical ones, the blocks are inked in different colors from set to set. Too large for the press, the blocks had to be printed by hand by rubbing the back of the paper with spoons. Although each set is supposed to contain five prints, for this installation at ICA Le Va arbitrarily selected six. All the better to see the sculptural power of color radically alter the shape of an image.

     

    Mechanical Drawing

    The architectural scale of Le Va’s collages declared a newly dominant role for drawing in his art. No longer plans, these works take form in their own right; they also suss out territory for his installations. (If his “Accumulated Vision” allowed us to see through the wall, now we were going to look at it.) In 1987, with the exhibition of a work called Quartet, at Barbara Gladstone Gallery, Le Va started making distributions that claimed the wall as well as the floor within the field of operations. The imagery was a continuation of the constructions of corridors and spheres, but the experience had evolved into a new realm. Enveloping and confrontational at once, these works positioned the viewer in the midst of a work that also faced one. In a way, it was like vivisection of the distributional field, separating mental puzzle from physical immediacy. Of his designation of the two parts, Le Va explained to curator Michael Semff, “The one on the floor is the more physical one, and the one on the wall…is more about your brain.”[footnote=151] The results, experienced as a toggling back and forth between different sets of sensation and scale, were viscerally felt, according to Le Va: “Again, I don’t know if it’s emotional, but it seemed to hit people on a gut level. If drawing all these configurations were just an intellectual act, it would never have that effect.”[footnote=152] No, it takes a different kind of activity to make diagrams into situations that are engrossing enough to inspire a feeling of dread.

    The encrypted situations of the eighties led to the “Dissected Situations—Institutional Templates” of the early nineties. Using the diptych form, to compose both sculpture installations and works on paper, this body of work is less architectural and more symbolic in nature. Not that the work is any less physical. Made of cast black hydrastone, the sculpture elements are brooding and massive. But as shaped forms, they clearly signify. (And they anticipate the Bunker Coagulation, which we encountered upon first entering the exhibition, at the very start of this essay.) This time Le Va didn’t want to leave the situation vague. A statement in Dreaded Intrusions—Institutional Templates, the catalog publication of related lithographic works, unlocks the iconography.[footnote=153] Introduced by the terms “dread” and “bewilderment,” the statement presents a lexicon of ten key terms, including Dissected (Dissect), Template(s) (Stencil), Close-up(s), Distance(s), Observer (Observe), Participant. As a textual companion, this dictionary has much to say about Le Va’s art in general. In particular, it informs the reading of four of the drawings in this exhibition. The artist’s definition of the term “Abbreviate (Abbreviation)” is especially illuminating: “Floor plan views of specific places in a medical institution (patients’ rooms, recovery areas, intensive care units, corridors, etc.) are combined with letters, numbers, or symbols that are common abbreviations in clinical medicine. These abbreviations are commonly found in patients’ records and on their medical charts.”[footnote=154] Thus informed, one learns to discern the structures of sine waves, of electrocardiogram reports, of the letters CPE (Chronic Pulmonary Emphysema) and MDD (Major Depressive Disorder), and to see those lozenge shapes and rectangles as laboratory stools and counters viewed from above, as the doctors and nurses confer over data in an attempt to reach a diagnosis, or at least a prescription. It is the dreaded intrusion of the institutional upon the intimate that is taking place in works, these encryptions of clinical space through the marks on the chart at the end of the hospital bed.

     

    Studio References

    Reading along amidst the fragmented data, one comes across the phrase “Reading Beckett, Reading Bernhard.” In a subset of the “Institutional Template” drawings, Le Va translated excerpts from two writers’ works into passages of abstract code. Quotes from various works by the great Irish existentialist Samuel Beckett are identified by the use of ellipsis. A novel by the Austrian-born writer Thomas Bernhard, who recently died, at the age of fifty-eight, after suffering a lifetime of tubercular disorders, is marked by the frequent appearance of a cone shape. One only has to read a few pages of Bernhard’s Correction to appreciate the uncanny appeal for Le Va. The main character, Roithamer, is a mathematician whose great works are an essay, which he destroyed in the process of correcting, and an architectural folly in the shape of a cone. (Roithamer himself would never have used the word: “He hated the word architect, or architecture,” but spoke, rather, of “the art of building”; “the word B U I L D I N G is one of the most beautiful in the language.”[footnote=155]) And, indeed, it is in the process of reducing these two writers’ distinctly different texts to equally illegible abstractions that Le Va seems to be offering the existential meaning of all such endeavors—including his own. When Roithamer finishes correcting his essay, it literally means the opposite of what he wrote originally. But he doesn’t care: “Because in the end nothing matters all that much . . . it’s all the same.”[footnote=156] A person may as well scatter particles of felt around a room or arrange massive constructions on the wall as throw oneself into the next all-consuming project. It’s process itself—and the degree of one’s engagement in it—that matters.

     

    Underground Cartoon

    In April 1992, Le Va spent three weeks in Munich, staying in an apartment where his German dealer, Fred Jahn, stored much of the African tribal art that he also represented. These objects made an immediate and deep impression, prompting the artist to make studies of them almost daily in his sketchbook during his stay. One hundred twenty-eight drawings, annotated with the date and a brief description, form a monumental suite called Munich Diary—African Sketchbook.[footnote=157] It starts with relatively abstract fragments of patterns and objects (dots and lines), then grows more representative of the objects themselves (outlines and silhouettes), only to continue as a fully operative code in which both forms of representation are merged into a language of signs of pots, masks, chairs, cups, axes, throwing knives (yes, a kind of cleaver), fly whisks, and figurines. A narrative in itself, this evolution describes the day-to-day relationship Le Va was having with these objects. As he told curator Michael Semff, at first they were just things to draw, but the more he looked at (and lived with) these objects, the more he said, “Drawing these things took the frightening power away…I was trying to take whatever spirit within them out and just objectifying them.”[footnote=158]

    Of course, this is one of the primal tales of modernism. Picasso was so struck by his first encounter with African art (which he apparently found to be as frightening and powerful as sex), he worked feverishly in his studio to exorcise it. And so did Le Va continue to work almost obsessively with African imagery for a number of years, using photographs that he took of the material at Jahn’s, as well as pictures from books, to prompt his memory, to generate more series of drawings, as well as photo-based collages, some involving stenciling. These series generate an imaginative energy of their own. As Le Va explained, “Your mind comes into play, which activates the drawings.”[footnote=159] Just as he had once turned photographs of poppy seeds, drawings of ball bearings, and paint sprayed through a comic book, so did he now turn his impressions of African objects into animated sequences of pictorial compression. Only this time, the subject matter came charged with an emotional intensity. Especially the masks, which Le Va often depicted from the back, as if to emphasize the eyeholes penetrating with light something as unfathomable as the countenance of death. Indeed, the African sketchbook series, taken in all its extended forms, comes packed with the subversive and sinister darkness of Le Va’s very first drawings, those underground comics of abstracted violence.

     

    Violent Period

    Around 1995, Le Va’s African imagery began to merge with another set of forms, this one abstracted from military architecture. The “Bunker Coagulation” series of drawings brings the painterly aspects of the mineral distributions off the floor and onto the page. The red oxides and black magnesium powders, combined with the viscosity of linseed oil, are translated into richly colored earth-toned mediums, loosely washed and densely applied, along with ink and graphite, into these most painterly of works. The imagery is based on photographs taken by Paul Virilio from his book Bunker Archeology.[footnote=160] Completely saturated with the smoke of cigarettes and filthy with ink stains, smudges, and random telephone-pad notes (“Rolf R Paramount”), Le Va’s copy is covered with signs of active duty served in his studio.

    Bunker Archeology begins with a preface that recounts Virilio’s discovery, in 1958, of something that had always been part of his native beachscape—in fact, he had just been using one as a cabana.[footnote=161] Virilio called it a “discovery in the archeological sense of the term” and set out to reconstruct the history that was, in fact, “one of the rare modern monolithic architectures.” Built by Hitler’s army to be an impenetrable rampart, concrete bunkers and submarine bases line the European littoral to form what was designed to be an “Atlantic Wall” against Allied invasion of occupied France. The architecture is characteristically massive, with rounded edges to deflect bullets and bombs. Built without foundations, they may heave over slightly should they be pounded or, say, pushed from the right. Some had steel beams bristling out from them, in order to detonate projectiles before they made contact. It’s an image that should immediately conjure, in this context, the pipes projecting from the walls and floors of Le Va’s Bullet Piece. And when Virilio writes of industrial warfare turning the world into a “carpet of trajectories,” how can one not see the lines of perspective ricocheting throughout the “Accumulated Vision” series?[footnote=162] In turn, then, how can one not hear Virilio saying: “Vehicles and projectiles are but particles that endlessly develop energy’s area. The conquest of the earth thus appears above all the conquest of energy’s violence.”[footnote=163]

    Bunkers, inasmuch as they deflect, launch, and absorb the energy of vehicles and projectiles, are the ultimate architecture of violence. And they have animal eyes. In one series of images in Virilio’s book, he trains his camera on the slitlike apertures and heavy brows that zoomorphize and anthropomorphize these facades of war into terrifying visages. As a viewer commented, “I wouldn’t want to have this looking at me when I hit the beachfront.” In Le Va’s drawings, bunker faces and silhouettes jostle around the “coagulations”—pictorial abbreviations for the “divine ichor” of human blood. And, together, they crowd the paper, saturated with ink and graphite medium, into deathlike darkness. It was an imagery that clearly preoccupied the artist, as a battery of works installed at ICA show: Row after row of drawings stand by the sculpture Bunker Coagulation (Pushed from the Right).

     

    Reconstruction

    In the field of archaeology, the process of reconstruction involves cataloging, a process that also proves fundamental to Barry Le Va’s recent work—first, in terms of the archaeology of his own studio, and, second, to set up a new metaphorical framework for the visual reconstructions his works entail. Around 1995, Le Va began to harvest material, which had been accumulating in his studio for decades, into a new body of work—folios of collages. He refers to these as his “scrapbooks.” Using photographs he’s taken, and Xerox copies from his sketches and notes, as well as the technical and scientific diagrams he has amassed over the years, each scrapbook has a distinct composition.[footnote=164] Collectively, they form a catalog of projects and themes within his art. There are books devoted to film that are based on his habit, at one point, of shooting roll upon roll of snapshots from videos of favorite movies, watched repeatedly in order to capture what represented essential moments of interest. These invariably have to do with strange camera perspectives within the movie and rarely show what the rest of us might identify as iconic moments in the work of, for instance, Peter Greenaway or, another of Le Va’s favorites, the sci-fi action film Event Horizon. His quest for puzzling angles, he says, was especially enriched by a number of Japanese films, in which Hokusi-like feats of pictorial abstraction seem basic to the camera work of even the most violent B-grade yakuza gangster films.

    Loosely gathered as portfolios, the scrapbooks were bound with thread—using the simple stitching technique of Japanese notebooks—on the occasion of their 2003 exhibition in the rare-book room of the Musée d’art et d’histoire, in Geneva.[footnote=165] In general, the books are the scale of portfolios, with at least one exception: When its vertical pages of brown butcher paper are open, one measures six feet across. The imagery is monumentally tragic. Black-and-white surveillance-style photographs give furtive looks at what we can barely stand to see: severely deformed inmates of some clinical institution. These shots appear in tandem with annotative drawings of chemical compounds, abbreviated versions of the simple chain of events that stands between normalcy and crippling breakdown. Like a misthrown switch on the railway, it just takes one broken synapse to throw the whole system into violent disorder.

    We have arrived at just such a scene with Barry Le Va’s 1999 installation at the Malmö Konsthall. Identified—Catalogued—Encased, 7 Families: Partially Accounted For transforms the gallery into a bunker of cast-concrete blocks, proportioned to represent the heads, trunks, and legs of various size figures. Le Va likened them to mummies at an archaeological dig, where “you find the head of a mummy, a limb of a mummy, you have to put them back together. It’s really about putting things back together, and that’s why the title is Partially Accounted For…It could be that they haven’t found all the parts to complete them yet. That’s the ambiguous part.”[footnote=166] And it’s the opening for disaster. Le Va speculates, “In the process of moving things from one place to another, the groupings change. It’s like in a disaster or at a dig, information is being assembled, so that parts get tagged, just to identify the groupings—so this means sometimes you have to put elements aside so that later you can assemble them all in one place.”[footnote=167]

    This is a distributional field that calls upon us not to reconstruct what happened here but to catalog what remains…to be buried. Le Va specified in a studio note: “Cataloguing Contaminated body parts encased in concrete for mass burial.”[footnote=168] As someone who, like the artist, was living in New York, breathing the contaminated air, this perfectly stone-cold work anticipates a monument for the awful events and aftermath of September 11, 2001. It also proves that the violence of Le Va’s art is being abstracted from contemporary life in general, not specific events. At this very moment, someone is cataloging body parts in the fields of Iraq, on the shores of Indonesia, in Chechnya.

    From mortar fire to mortuaries to music, the survey of Le Va’s work concludes with an installation entitled 9g—Wagner, 2005. The first work to refer explicitly to it, music has always been in the background of Le Va’s art. As much as certain books and films have served as clues to the thinking behind his work, so do the recordings that fill up shelves in his studio. The artist and critic Stephen Ellis, whose essay “At Order’s Edge” Le Va considers one of the most sympathetic readings of his art, started with Ornette Coleman’s improvisational jazz and finished with Arnold Schoenberg’s atonal music to describe the trajectory from Le Va’s early distributions to his “Accumulated Vision” installations.[footnote=169] Indeed, Le Va himself seems to be continuing this trajectory into the present by invoking Wagner’s melodious epics and operatic scale to correspond with the profoundly symbolic nature of his most current art.

    The sculptural distribution of floor and wall elements that comprise the new work are in the process of being fabricated even as I finish writing this essay. But this is part of the suspense in making a show with Barry Le Va: His works take final form only in the installation process. First created in his studio and swept up, or made for temporary exhibitions and destroyed, his early distributions represent artistic freedom in the extreme. Yet, the reality of reconstruction can loom like back taxes, not only for Le Va but for a whole generation of process artists. Materials that were once readily available, like wool felt, for instance, are now hard to find or extremely costly. (The cheap stuff today is all polyester; the woolen goods have to be imported from Germany, from the same place that supplies “Beuys” felt, which is much thicker than the easily cut cloth weight that Le Va works with.) Imagine the challenge of re-creating plans and proportions that were part of a mindset one has not engaged in for decades.

    In the course of developing the checklist for this survey, Le Va’s reluctance to consider including certain past works is as understandable as his desire to focus on the prospect of making a new installation. His overall ambivalence was evidenced by the fact that he had kept no record of his exhibition history. The chronology in this catalog represents a feat of detective work—reconstructing the paper trail of shows and dates that vanished with every announcement card and catalog that Le Va never kept. He out-and-out refused to make a powder piece, after the inclusion of one in his 1988 survey only served to bring back the nightmares of drafts and doodlers. The felt-and-glass distribution Continuous and Related Acts; Discontinued by the Act of Dropping was selected not only because it is a major early work but also because its installation is relatively routine. When the Whitney Museum of American Art acquired the piece after its reconstruction for a show in 1990, Le Va drew up the requisite specifications. In granting it an institutional life of its own, however, the artist essentially relinquishes his involvement. This is an interesting conceit to keep in mind: As long as a work belongs to him, it remains subject to the state of flux in which Le Va keeps all aspects of his art. Everything from titles to materials, to arrangements, to scale, is subject to ongoing change—making this very exhibition of Barry Le Va’s work one massive process piece. There are decisions that won’t be made until the actual installation is under way, titles that may be altered at the last minute. This is why it was so important for the catalog to document the show with new photography. Every time a work is installed, it becomes a new snapshot of itself, temporarily suspended in that ongoing process of change.

     

    Sinister Profile

    The new work, 9g—Wagner is being created for the tall space at ICA, a double-height gallery with walls that rise thirty feet. Based on the artist’s first rounds of preparatory drawings, I sense it will relate to his recent installation at the Judin Gallery, which involved abstracted diagrams of proteins exploded exponentially in scale. But I am not clear what form the final work will take. Especially the floor elements, which Le Va is having fabricated from a resin that will resemble concrete without being so friable. The wall elements have been charged to ICA’s crew, headed by Robert Chaney and Shannon Bowser. Le Va provided the schematic drawing for a configuration of thirty-five elements. He instructed that they should appear to have been die-cut from a solid, black material, but provided no further specifications for achieving this machine-shop effect on a wood-shop budget. Nevertheless, the results, built from wood and coated in a rubber compound, are seamless. With all the authority and anonymity of industrial objects, they imbue the general question, What do these shapes represent? with the menacing notion, What are these things for?

    In drawings, the wall configuration recalls somewhat the silhouetted plans of bunkers in Virilio’s book. One of the shapes has a distinctive curved cutout that gives it an anthropomorphic cast, vaguely reminiscent of faces in the African sketchbooks. Its profile appears encoded in the title as the number 9, which could also be the letter g—a key to the general confusion Le Va likes his art to instill. There is something dark about an installation that will confront us with black runes while surrounding us with cryptic building blocks. For some, the reference to Wagner may be shadowed by his most infamous fan, Hitler, as well as the composer’s own alleged anti-Semitism. These last inferences would seem more extraneous if the word that Le Va has been most apt to use in recent conversation about his work wasn’t “sinister.” And as sinister, even cynical, as this sounds, there is a positive sense of assurance in Le Va’s installation that also comes through in reading the title. By combining a musical reference along with a numbering system, suggestive of a sequence, Le Va says he wanted to underscore the way he sees all of his work—in terms of major themes with minor variations. The overall composition may be difficult, struck as it is from a bass line that echoes with the sounds of shattering glass. But it is being worked with the intensity and eloquence of a lifetime of hitting limits (cultural, physical) and pushing forward. Too deeply resonant of its own darkness to be transcendent, Le Va’s art accepts with realism the boundaries that it pounds against to realize maximum velocity and impact.

     

    Noir Light

    Looking back on this survey is more than forty years’ worth of work in which nothing random has occurred, and everything, including violence, mystery, and confusion, has been subject to the artist’s control. The most abrupt-looking changes and apparent contradictions turn out to be the results of decisions and actions that can be accounted for within the larger plan of Le Va’s accumulated vision. This plan, which asserted itself at each step in the process of the exhibition, disclosed a critical sense of motive one day. Because of the controlled nature at every level of Barry Le Va’s art, this was not a project one could achieve with any curatorial distance. Working with the proximity of an accomplice, l clocked a good many hours at his studio, sifting through and organizing boxes of photo documentation to familiarize myself with past jobs. In the process of piling pictures according to groups, it occurred to me how dramatically the work changes from one decade to the next. With this in mind, the shifts suddenly began to seem less jagged and more as if the artist was adhering to a schedule. Looking through various undated notes he had kept over the years in a box, I discovered a pair of clues that led me to believe that perhaps this is exactly what Le Va has been up to. “In sculpture, a series is finished or completed when it starts leading to other ideas, etc., and I have become bored with repetition,” he wrote in a statement.[footnote=170] On another paper, I read what sounded like further inducement for surprise. “If you aren’t making art that challenges you, you aren’t making art that challenges anyone,” Le Va began in a manifesto to himself.

    Resistance, challenges, pushing, shoving, rearranging—how else would one expect Le Va’s art to develop, except with the frequency and force of seismic disruption?

  • “Portrait of an Art Dealer.” Introduction to Julien Levy, Memoir of an Art Gallery. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 2003 (reprint of 1977 original), pp. ix-xxi.

    Portrait of an Art Dealer

    From 1931 to 1949, Julien Levy’s New York gallery played an essential role in the shift of the avant-garde from Paris to America. It championed experimental film and photography and served as a venue for artists fleeing Europe and Hitler. It presented the first New York exhibitions of artists such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Joseph Cornell, Frida Kahlo, Salvador Dalí, Arshile Gorky, Lee Miller, René Magritte, and Dorothea Tanning, all the while promoting a vision of art at its broadest. There were “idea shows” suggested by such critical thinkers as André Breton and Marcel Duchamp, as well as shows about fashion, design, dance, popular culture (Walt Disney and Gracie Allen both showed here), and even music (including a performance by Paul Bowles). In bridging the gap between Gilbert Seldes’s early modern model of the “seven lively arts” and today’s more academic “visual studies,” the activities of the Julien Levy Gallery spark electric. It is also a place to watch as the identity of the art gallery as a commercial institution takes shape, from a near-curiosity shop (books, prints, and lampshades were among the first wares) to a contemporary art gallery: naked, white, and modern. All this history argues for the need to read Levy’s memoirs afresh. But there remains a simpler reason for picking up Memoir of an Art Gallery: Julien Levy tells it as he lived it, with wit and appetite. This is a book that deals in sensual adventure, which is exactly what you hear in Levy’s voice, whether written or spoken.

    The first time I heard Levy speak was in a WABC radio recording, aired on June 11, 1938, and now in the collection of the Museum of Broadcasting. People who knew Julien Levy often speak of his voice, which I listened for and heard twice in the course of researching the exhibition “Julien Levy: Portrait of an Art Gallery.”[footnote=1] Named after the memoirs now being introduced, “Portrait of an Art Gallery” aimed to conjure the dynamism of a transitional period in American art history through the doings of this maverick art dealer. In the WABC broadcast, Levy was defining the art movement with which his name was synonymous: “Sur-RAIL-ism.” Or so he pronounced it, in a voice inflected as much by his upper-middle class New York upbringing, as by his years doing business in Paris, as well as by cigarettes, cocktails, and a sophisticated sense of culture. In short, it was deep, smoky, and a little affected. The next time I heard his voice, it had aged a few decades, and now when Levy said the word, it was as if a train was rumbling right through the middle of it: surrrrrrrRRRAILLLLLLism. He was narrating a short film called Surrealism Is…, in which he also starred. The film was made as a project with students at SUNY Purchase, where, late in his life, Levy had plans—which never came to pass—to establish a Center for Surrealist Studies. The class appears to have been psychedelic in form: hippyish-looking students conducting experiments in creative automatism outdoors in the open fields around Levy’s house, or playing indoors with his collection of Surrealist art and other curiosities.

    Levy presides over the film, a grand wizard imparting his life’s work to a new generation. For that is what his commitment amounted to—much more than just the art of his day, something he sold as part of his job, Surrealism was an avocation to which he was dedicated. You hear it in his recital of the movement’s definitions, poems, and erotic prayers.

    “A little more than green and less than blond,” he intones after Paul Eluard and Benjamin Péret’s 1925 proverbs. “What is Day?,” an indoctrinated student recites from a 1928 dialogue. “A woman bathing nude at nightfall.” You see it in Levy’s surroundings; besides being chock full of art treasures—there are Max Ernst’s collages and frottages, Alberto Giacometti’s sculpture On ne joue plus, and Dali’s painting Accommodations of Desire—the shelves are loaded with the kinds of optical devices, found objects, and natural artifacts through which the uncanny expressed itself every day to properly attuned Surrealists. The movement’s love of games is evinced by a chess board, evocative of the ones made by artists for the gallery’s 1944 exhibition “The Imagery of Chess.” Indeed, Levy liked to imply that where he failed as a businessman, he succeeded as a collector. But this seems too modest an account of the active devotion with which Levy practiced Surrealism during his entire life. “Pop art is a neo-Surrealism,” he concludes toward the end of the film.

    A rakishly elegant man in his youth, Levy in the film appears (and sounds) aged into a regal wreck of the figure described by the dealer James B. Meyers: “Julien Levy reminds me of Antonin Artaud, probably because I had seen a photograph of Julien with a shaved head, which Berenice Abbott had taken years before in Paris. He is intelligent and handsome with a profile rivaling that of the great actor John Barrymore.”[footnote=2] (Note Barrymore’s bad behavior in the memoir to come: he pees on a painting by Max Ernst.) The shaved head also deserves further comment. Levy claimed that he was following a folk wisdom to rejuvenate his scalp by rubbing bear grease into it. He also liked to say that Marcel Duchamp had put him up to it, by saying that shaved heads were quite the thing among the radical chic in Paris in 1928.

    Levy’s devotion to Surrealism was seconded only by what he called his “hero-worshipping” of Duchamp and Alfred Stieglitz, whom he claimed as his godfathers in art. Both men were high priests of early Modernism. Prone to sermonizing and wearing capes, Stieglitz instructed Levy (along with the countless other acolytes who would sit at his feet) to be reverent, especially of photography—then a new medium of dubious aesthetic standing. More profanely, Duchamp inducted the young man into the living pleasures of bohemia when he invited him to tag along on a trip to Paris. On board ship, the two men speculated on the makings of a self-lubricating mechanical woman and discussed plans to shoot a film using Man Ray’s equipment. As told in the memoir, the film was never made, but the trip altered the course of Levy’s life. Both Stieglitz and Duchamp were also artists, dealers, publishers, curators, writers, and lovers of printed matter—all inclinations they passed along to Levy. Besides running a gallery for almost nineteen years, Levy wrote extensively (including a beautiful proto-history of Surrealism in 1936 and monographs on Eugéne Berman and Arshile Gorky)[footnote=3] and helped create exhibitions throughout his life (such as “The Disquieting Muse” at the Contemporary Art Museum in Houston in 1958). All of his own shows were accompanied by brochures that announced not only the exhibition but a high sense of style as well. As an artist, Levy was purely an amateur, but he did make a few short Surrealist-style films in the 1930s, including a romp with Max Ernst set at Caresse Crosby’s mill retreat outside Paris, and exquisite portraits, full of motion, of Mina Loy shopping at the marché aux paces and of Lee Miller.

    Memoir of an Art Gallery proves Julien Levy to be an excellent raconteur as well. He knows the value of exaggeration and elision when it comes to crafting the better story. And this is precisely how the book is constructed—tales of luminaries like James Joyce and Giorgio de Chirico, and incendiary episodes such as “Duchamp’s Kiss” and “Walpurgisnacht Chez Tzara.” Each chapter becomes its own piece in a lapidary account that leaves, as all remembrances do, gaps and fissures. To till in some of these gaps, let’s add a little more family background. Julien Sampson Levy was born in New York on January 22, 1906, the oldest of three, with a brother Edgar (Ned) and sister Elizabeth. His mother, Isabelle Estelle Isaacs, had been orphaned as a child and was raised by an uncle, who would co-found the first English-language newspaper for Jews in America. For generations, the Isaacs had been a prominent Jewish family; Rabbi Samuel M. Isaacs read over Abraham Lincoln’s funeral cortege when it passed through New York. Levy’s father, Edgar, who was also raised in the city, had first studied art before becoming a successful lawyer and real estate entrepreneur. He and his partners, including Isabelle’s cousin Stanley Isaacs (later a borough president of Queens), were among the first to develop luxury apartment buildings along Park Avenue. Later in life, Edgar’s real estate empire would obviously aid his son’s desire to set up shop in Manhattan. Both parents, in fact, seem to have had much to do with Levy’s becoming an art dealer. And though Julien depicts his father as a philistine, the elder Levy collected art and dabbled in painting, and also seems to have had a genuine sympathy for his son’s interest in art. Furthermore, as much as Julien sides against his conventional parent and acts like a bohemian, he never truly rejected Edgar’s bourgeois tastes or values. He was, as most Surrealists were, an armchair radical.

    Julien’s mother doted on her oldest son. When as a boy he contracted rheumatic fever, the family moved to Scarsdale, where Levy attended the progressive Roger Ascham School before enrolling at Harvard University. Harvard, unlike the rest of the Ivy League, admitted Jews; Levy’s mother had attended Harvard’s sister college Radcliffe, where her ties later proved useful in helping her son find his way out of an English major and into the study of art. During the summer of Levy’s freshman year, his mother was run over and killed. According to the local newspaper’s obituaries, “Mrs. Levy, accompanied by a Mr. Jacobson, was walking toward Mamaroneck road when an automobile…bore down upon them, crashing into both. The automobile knocked Mrs. Levy down passing over her.” “As she lingered over her fatal injury, her one concern was the welfare of her husband and children,” another one wrote, “and her sole regret was that they would be deprived of such service and comfort as might have been able to render to them, had she been spared a few years more.” Still a third noted that “Mrs. Levy was a member of the Women’s Club and frequently seen in productions by the Wayside Players and the Fireside Players.”

    Buried in these shards are a woman’s creative aspirations. But what is most glaring is the fact that, however violently it rent through his life, Julien’s mother’s death reads largely as an absence from his memoirs. It’s the absence filled, or at least marked, by the intense attachment Levy formed for his mother-in-law, the poet and painter Mina Loy, whose own glamour and sense of personal drama were part of the mythology of the Paris scene during the 1920s.[footnote=4] The fact that she was the widow of one of Duchamp’s heroes, the Dada poet and boxer Arthur Cravan, who disappeared at sea, only heightened her mystique. More than a muse (and less than a mother), Loy is certainly a complicated figure in Levy’s early life as an art dealer and as a husband to her daughter Joella. During their marriage, Joella efficiently ran the day-to-day operations of the gallery in New York, while Loy (flightily) acted as Levy’s agent in Paris. Nurtured by both, Levy was indulged as a son, lover, boss, partner, and proud father of three sons—until Joella left him in 1937 due to his drinking and philandering. At the time of his death, Levy was reported to have been at work editing the voluminous correspondence he kept up with his mother-in-law throughout the rest of her life.[footnote=5]

    But the story is getting ahead of us. Back at Harvard, after his mother’s death, Levy continued on the path she had set for him, which notably included Paul Sachs’s king-making course for museum professionals, “Museum Work and Museum Problems.” There he met Alfred Barr, Jr., Philip Johnson, and Lincoln Kirstein, all to be affiliated with the Museum of Modern Art, and A. Everett (Chick) Austin, Jr., the future director of the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, among others. Of this institution-bound group, Levy distinguished himself by quitting a semester before graduation in order to try to get a job in the movies (he was besotted with Gloria Swanson). When running errands as a prop boy for Columbia Studios in New York failed to match his aspirations, however, he returned to his initial interest in art. Knocking around the galleries with his father, Levy met Duchamp, who was then acting as Brancusi’s agent. The two formed a friendship, and in February 1927 Levy embarked with Duchamp for Paris on that fateful trip. Returning six months later, he arrived home with his new bride Joella and, among other things, their wedding gift from Brancusi, The Newborn, a bronze head now in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art. Levy’s Paris plunge instilled an ambition to open his own gallery in New York—an ambition that his father agreed to support, provided his son serve a proper apprenticeship. And so from 1928 to 1931, Levy worked as an assistant at the Weyhe Gallery, which specialized in rare books and prints, and where he had his first experience as a dealer, presenting photographs by Eugène Atget.

    On November 2, 1931, Julien Levy opened his own art gallery with tribute to Alfred Stieglitz and American photography. Following that, he went on to present a basically European avant-garde aesthetic and culture, thereby establishing himself as the middleman between artists and collectors, a pioneering purveyor of wares to the Modernist institutions being developed by his former classmates. Throughout the 1930s and 40s, all of the major museums interested in acquiring cutting-edge contemporary art bought from Levy. It is interesting, then, to take note of the prejudices that attach themselves to Levy’s mercantile enterprise. Writing for Vogue, one journalist described him in nearly Fagin-esque terms: “His keen and almost glittering eye, focused on the Parisian scene, may discover this decade’s Cézanne at any moment—a possibility that keeps him and his clients slightly feverish at all times.”[footnote=6] Written in 1938, this statement serves to remind us that the Germans were certainly not alone in their anti-Semitism. Levy, for his part, resented the secondary status accorded dealers within the echelons of the art world, which clearly benefited from their vision and risks.

    Then again, he himself did not always give credit where it was due. One of his gallery’s claims to fame is that in January 1932 it hosted “Surréalisme,” the first exhibition devoted to the movement in New York. This much is true, but it short-shrifts the importance of Chick Austin’s earlier “Newer Super-Realism,” held at the Wadsworth Atheneum, albeit to less public fanfare than Levy’s show, which won a huge New York audience and national press. The two shows ended up being collaborative in that they shared many (though not all) of the same works. But the fact remains that Austin’s show was its own initiative, and by opening on November 15, 1931, it could rightfully claim to be the first exhibition of Surrealism in America.[footnote=7]

    There are several other claims worth tempering. The first is small and involves Levy’s “discovery” of Joseph Cornell. It’s an excellent story about Cornell—and he probably was a most gray young man—stopping by the gallery to look at photographs, only to become, at the behest of the dealer, the first home-grown American Surrealist. What’s missing, however, is any indication of how deliberate and thorough Cornell was in his haunting of New York’s art world. Perhaps Levy, like most of Cornell’s contacts, had no idea how well-connected this most discrete of artists was. If anything, Cornell may have seen in the dealer a potential advocate for his own interests in photography and collage. Indeed, over time, Cornell worked hard to distance himself from his original identification with Surrealism, which he came to see as a form of black magic. (And he seems to have never forgiven Levy for scheduling all of his gallery exhibitions around Christmas time, the better to flog Cornell’s collage objects as toys for adults.)

    Then there’s Levy’s purported rescue of Eugène Atget’s great photographic archive of Paris. Levy slightly glorifies his early investment in and enthusiasm for the work, at the expense of Berenice Abbott’s essential role. An American photographer based in Paris, Abbott physically prevented this vast collection of plate-glass negatives and prints from being pitched in 1928 into the dustbin of history. Long after Levy’s interest had waned, she continued to make it part of her life’s work to care for and promote the archive, finally landing it a place in the Museum of Modern Art, where it exists as the Abbott-Levy Collection, in 1968. Still, to be fair, Abbott was no less proprietary against Levy’s claims, and Cornell’s championship by Levy was absolutely critical to launching his career, so these revisions to Levy’s memoirs have more to do with tone than with fact.

    And who knows if, as a fledgling gallerist, Julien Levy actually invented the gallery press release and the cocktail party opening? No such patents exist. But the dealer’s claims to priority seem worth defending. Levy’s gallery certainly made art openings, which had hitherto been insular affairs for collectors, into public events that anyone could attend simply out of interest in seeing something new. This is one of the greatest pleasures of Memoir of an Art Gallery: its snapshot depictions of a cultural scene in which, it seemed, anything could happen. Between the wars, not only was the art world much smaller, but with the economy in Depression there was considerably less at stake. There were opportunities for experimentation, and openness in general about what culture could be. Pay attention to all that Levy embarks on, either in hopes of making money or achieving fame. Among his freshest schemes were: Swiss Cheese cloth (his plan to print photographs onto utilitarian objects and materials);[footnote=8] the curved gallery wall (his second gallery location featured an undulating wall upon which works of art seemed to unfurl as viewers moved by them); the gallery caravan (in 1941, Levy took his stock on the road to San Francisco, then Los Angeles, in hopes of drumming up West Coast collectors); Salvador Dalí’s “Dream of Venus” (a Surrealist funhouse for the 1939 World’s Fair); and “The Carnival of Venice” (the gallery’s 1933 exhibition of photographs by Max Ewing of celebrities, socialites, and friends aping in front of a painted Venetian backdrop—Warholian photo-booth-ography thirty years before Pop!).

    On a much darker note, throughout the gallery’s history there are the undercurrents of accident, alcohol, guilt, and depression that appear twisted into this memoir’s silences. Most tragically, in recounting Arshile Gorky’s suicide, Levy isn’t altogether clear that it occurred only a month after he had injured them both in a car crash in which Gorky’s neck and painting arm were both broken. Levy recounts the episode like a cineaste’s dream, starting with chickens and brakes squawking, and ending with the closing of the Julien Levy Gallery in 1949, a year after Gorky’s death. Here, as in some other places, Levy’s account seems too pat, too remote, to convey the true shades of personal memory. It also downplays the downspin of his business, which had been growing steadily out of touch with the latest advancements in art. Uninterested in Abstract Expressionism, Levy stood by Surrealism, to be eclipsed by dealers who maintained more current visions: Pierre Matisse, Sidney Janis, and Betty Parsons among them. But such is the case with good story telling and storytellers—they invite further unraveling.

    First published in 1977, Memoir of an Art Gallery closes with Gorky’s last words, echoed here by Levy in tribute to the history of his gallery: “Good-bye my ‘loveds’.” However, the story hardly ends here. Levy’s 1944 marriage to his second wife, the sculptor Muriel Streeter, ended in divorce. On January 20, 1957, in Bridgewater, Levy married Jean Farley McLaughlin, to whom he dedicated this book, and who remains devoted to preserving her husband’s memory. Until he died in 1981, at the age of seventy-five, Levy remained an engaged emissary of Surrealism. In his later years, he cultivated a Stieglitz-like habit of wearing capes. No doubt he cut a daunting silhouette on his regular visits to New York, where he kept up with contemporary art (he saw Surrealism in the work of artists as diverse as Joseph Beuys and Tom Wesselman) and collaborated with his fellow dealers (including Richard Feigen and Leo Castelli) to show and sell work from his collection. In the late 1970s, Levy was introduced to curator David Travis of the Art Institute of Chicago. Apparently, when the gallery closed Levy had a lot of leftover photography inventory, notably hundreds of works by Jacques-André Boiffard, Lee Miller, Robert Parry, Man Ray, Maurice Tabard, and others. Forty years later, these prints emerged from storage to constitute a virtual missing history—occluded from both photography and Modernism—of Surrealist photography. During Levy’s lifetime, a large number of works were acquired by the AIC to form the Julien Levy Collection. More recently, in 2001, the Philadelphia Museum of Art acquired through gifts by Levy’s widow and Lynne and Harold Honickman all of the remaining photographs from Levy’s estate to establish the Julien Levy Collection of Photographs.

    What became of other effects of the gallery’s history? Key elements found their way to private and public collections: Cornell’s L’Egypte de Mlle Cléo de Mérode cours élémentaire d’histoire naturelle to the Robert Lehrman Collection, Washington, D.C.; Max Ernst’s Vox Angelica to the Daniel Filpacchi Collection, Paris; Dalí’s Persistence of Memory to The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Giacometti’s On ne joue plus to the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; Gorky’s New Hope Road to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Frida Kahlo’s Self-Portrait Dedicated to Trotsky to the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C.; Pavel Tchelitchew’s Phenomenon to the Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow; Dorothea Tanning’s Guardian Angels to the New Orleans Museum of Art, and so forth out into the world.[footnote=9]

    And what of the papers? In compiling his memoirs, Levy gathered his archives around him, including brochures, reviews, and other related ephemera, to work in a small writing studio on his Connecticut property. It’s unclear how the fire began, but much of the material was destroyed either by flames or water. Whatever could be swept up was saved in a storage area attached to the house, and considered basically inaccessible due to its poor condition. This is not to say that all was lost, and indeed, recent efforts to process what does remain have turned up some astounding stuff. By way of example, let me end with my own story. Last year, I was working on a book about Salvador Dalí’s “Dream of Venus” pavilion, a story in which Levy naturally plays a leading role. I had all but completed my research when the treasures started emerging from the nooks and crannies of Jean and Julien’s house. They included such things as a gramophone record called Dream of Venus (labeled as a recitation by actress Ruth Ford and an accompanying chorus for the World’s Fair), a typed manuscript for the same (“Behold! I am Venus! I am the most beautiful woman in the world!”), a list of rejected names for the concession (“Dalí Trance Forms” and “Dalí’s Wet Dreams” among the lamest), and, most astonishingly, photographs of a strange studio session that involved dressing live models in dead seafood for an unrealized photo-mural. And it didn’t all offer itself at once, but as if summoned piece-by-piece, just in time to fuel the narrative I was in the process of constructing.

    You might call this surreal and leave it at that: Julien himself evidently cherished such coincidences. The real point is that much remains to be known and written about Julien Levy, about his life, his work, his influence as an important American art dealer, and his far-reaching, often arcane interests. His memoirs only begin to tell the tales.