DiCorcia’s night-owl athletes (image right, detail of “Harvest Moon”) become religious icons, whereas Taylor Wood, in languid suspension in daylight, just seems like nothing more than herself playing tricks with Photoshop–a literal artist-in-the-studio approach. My favorite tidbit on this work is that bondange expert Master Rope Knot tied her up several feet above the floor using dozens of ropes. (She then Photoshopped out the ropes).
The video of a man with a white dove on his head casually tapdancing over a sleeping (or dead?) body also didn’t offer much. I read in the gallery notes that the tapdancer was dancing on the prone guy’s chest and stomach, but to me it just looked like he was behind him. Without believability of the transgression, this was a lost cause (would your tap shoes make clacking noises on someone’s tummy?)
For other really interesting photos and video, I’d have to send you to “Adaptive Behavior,” one of the inaugural shows at the New Museum‘s new home, in Chelsea. My favorite pieces in the show were by Robin Rhode (also up at Perry Rubenstein‘s 23rd Street gallery until Oct. 30), Fikret Atay, Yoshuo Okon and Tsuyoshi Ozawa, but everyone in the show of 11 artists from five continents had work worth considering. The others were Kwabena P. Slaughter, Bojan Sarcevic, Suchan Konoshita, Fiorenza Menini, Kerry Tribe, Robert Melee (sooo transgressive), and Tonico Lemos Auad, many of whom required program notes for clarity.
At the moment I’m high on Robin Rhode, who mixes low-tech drawings of props with equally low-tech performance that he either videos or photographs (photos at the New Museum, videos and photos at Rubenstein). Whether he’s drawing a skateboard on a wall and then mounting and dismounting the image (detail above left), or he’s drawing dice and then throwing them and scooping up his winnings, or drawing a car and then washing it (image right, “Whitewalls” video ), he’s got this tender wish-fulfillment story that’s loaded with cultural values. Rhode, who was born in Cape Town, S.A., offers up in his photos a stop-action series that’s more cartoon cell than Edweard Muybridge, but it’s the sweet chalk drawings in deserted urban landscapes of a street urchin who is struggling to bring his 2-D dreams into the 3-D real world that’s touching and noble and touches on poverty, hip-hop and pop culture and street life.
Part of what I love about his work is its relationship to personal mark-making, which in general loses out in photography and video.
I also admired two videos of people dancing in unexpected circumstances from Fikret Atay of Turkey; I admired a pair of videos of two Mexican policemen in uniform performing, one twirling his nightstick (image left), the other dancing, the video showing only a tight shot of their bodies, from Yoshua Okon, a Mexican who lives and works in both Mexico City and Los Angeles; and I got a laugh out of Tsuyoshi Ozawa’s political clown, a character from a Japanese children’s program, who, manages to communicate some serious absurdities about deadly weapons and such even with a language barrier.
This show, which bills itself as exploring the shaky border land between private and public worlds is well worth a visit. Oh, and the new New Museum space far outdoes its former SoHo home. The work looks great here. (I didn’t have enough focus, so late in the day, to get much out of Kayle Brandon and Heath Bunting’s show, “Rules of Crime,” which looked sort of interesting, with instructions to follow and survivalist themes. Like “Adaptive Behavior,” it runs until Nov. 13. A show on Agnes Denes’ installation art also challenged my attention span. It was more about art than it was art. I wasn’t in the mood.
More New York later, but I thought I’d get these up first and fast.