The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Blake babies

New visions at the BCA and the ICA
By GREG COOK  |  August 5, 2009

 Mills-Tory-Flair
WALKING Tory Fair's sculpture has the effect of a beautiful, magical transformation — with a creepy aftertaste.

Nature is mysterious and mystical in "And the fair Moon rejoices" (at the BCA's Mills Gallery through August 16), as foreign as the wilds of New England probably seemed to its first English settlers. And maybe there are witches about.

This lyrical show was organized by Emily Isenberg, formerly director of LaMontagne Gallery, and Randi Hopkins, who co-ran Allston Skirt Gallery and wrote for the Phoenix before becoming a curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art. The title comes courtesy of William Blake, the result of the curators' thinking that these six artists are "contemporary visionaries" in Blake's wake.

In New Yorker Justine Kurland's staged photos, folks frolic nude outdoors, as if in some flower-child community-theater follies. Hunters shows three naked ladies with flower-garland crowns walking in tall grass like muses or fates or witches. The mythological symbolism and playacting may be New Age cheese, but the odd doings intrigue.

Arlington artist Tory Fair's Walking is a rough-cast-rubber sculpture of an upside-down woman (cast from the artist's own body) with a chandelier-like structure of flowers sprouting from her torso to hold her off the floor. The effect is reminiscent of Kiki Smith — a beautiful, magical transformation, with a creepy aftertaste. The sculpture's glossy yellow surface is like a slimy cocoon; the flowers are an infestation.

 Mills-Justine_kurland
Justine Kurland, Hunters, 2004, C- print, Edition of 5, 25 x 29 1/2 framed, (NUDES)


Brooklynite Larry Bamburg's Iceburg [sic] et cetera and so on could be a model of a universe, with its mountain made of crumpled paper taped atop two Plexiglas pedestals orbited by bits of lint and a dead fly. The orbiting things are actually suspended from a mobile spun by a fan, which also jiggles a fishing line that wiggles the legs of a little paper deer crushed under the pedestals. It's endearingly half-assed, charming because its jury-rigged complexity transforms its simple parts into a world.

The rest of the show's dreaming about the great outdoors is less interesting, but everything hangs together elegantly. The connections Hopkins and Isenberg propose feel intuitive, so the group is greater than the sum of its parts.

At first, "Momentum 14: Rodney McMillian," which has been organized by curator Nicholas Baume at the ICA (through November 1), struck me as your usual nihilist non sequitur masturbation. McMillian's installation Sentimental Disappointment fills one wall with a sketchy black painting of his Los Angeles house. Furniture from his home sits around the gallery: a chair with an eight-foot-tall black column driven through its seat, a refrigerator with a hole punched through the door, a dinged-up kitchen table and chairs with a television on top. 

Mills-David_Olsen 
Submersions, Installation view. David Olsen, 2009

It seems random, except that the television plays a 25-minute video of the artist stabbing a mattress repeatedly with a large kitchen knife — like something out of Psycho and then ripping it apart with his hands. It's performance art, so McMillian performs it like a chore, but his act makes all the art here feel like domestic violence. A video playing outside the gallery of McMillian dancing desultorily to Porgy and Bess could point to frustrations of race (the artist is African-American) and poverty. Or not. I feel myself straining to find meaning in these forlorn objects. How much should we give artists the benefit of the doubt?

Read Greg Cook's blog at gregcookland.com/journal.

  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Culture and Lifestyle, William Blake, Travel and Tourism,  More more >
| More

[ 02/17 ]   Bob Marley  @ Landing At Pine Point
[ 02/17 ]   Brzowski + Lady Essence + Icebox  @ 131 Washington
[ 02/17 ]   Farren-Butcher, Inc. + Jonny Lang  @ State Theatre
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE ‘2012 RISCA FELLOWSHIP EXHIBITION’  |  February 15, 2012
    Last weekend The New York Times proclaimed Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning , the debut video game of former Red Sox pitcher and outspoken Republican millionaire Curt Schilling's 38 Studios, "one of the finest action role-playing games yet made."
  •   NANCY HOLT LOCATES THE COSMOS  |  February 14, 2012
    Holt is part explorer, part surveyor, part hippie/New Age dreamer. And this thorough survey of her art from 1966 to '80 shows her finding her way to becoming one of the pioneers of the "Land Art" or "Earthworks" movement.
  •   ‘VALENTINED’ SHOWCASES GEEK LOVE AT CRAFTLAND  |  February 08, 2012
    These missives don't have the swooning, steamy, bodice-ripping passion of romance novel covers.
  •   ‘TAOIST GODS’ AND ‘IMMORTALS’ AT BROWN AND RISD  |  January 31, 2012
    As China marked the beginning of the Year of the Dragon with lion and dragon dances and fireworks last week, Brown University's Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology was debuting "Taoist Gods from China: Ceremonial Paintings from the Mien".
  •   THE DECORDOVA BIENNIAL ROOTS FOR THE HOME TEAM  |  January 31, 2012
    "Contemporary and Boston, Opposites No Longer," a New York Times headline announced in October. It was another alert that $1 billion invested in expanding and endowing local museums over the past decade is paying off in a newly vigorous Boston contemporary art scene.  

 See all articles by: GREG COOK



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group