Strange beauty
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Young Chang
Get close -- maybe even uncomfortably close -- to Kristin Calabrese’s
painting “Luck of the Draw” and you’ll see that the apartment being shown
is so much more than just a ramshackle room.
Yes, the ceiling of this abandoned dwelling place drips with peeling
paint. The floor is speckled with debris from above. Walls are cracked,
drawers are open, cabinets are open, the counter is messy.
But inspect the smaller contents of the scene that is part of the
Orange County Museum of Art’s 2002 California Biennial and you’ll see
fresh tomatoes on the counter, celery stalks and a just-baked looking
loaf of bread.
The words “I’m not over you” wrap around a can of tuna in the bottom
cupboard. “I hate you” scrolls around a stout bottle of spice. “I still
love you” banners across a “can of who knows what,” said co-curator of
the exhibit Irene Hofmann.
“She’s created the beautiful out of the distressing,” Hofmann added,
of artist Calabrese.
Which can be said of most of the dozen artists featured in this year’s
biennial show. The works are edgy, thoughtful, some disturbing, some at
first confusing and each of them strangely beautiful.
The biennial looks at pieces created in the past two years by
California artists. The purpose isn’t to survey as much as it is to take
art’s “pulse,” wrote co-curators Hofmann and Elizabeth Armstrong in the
introduction to the show’s catalog.
Open Sunday through Sept. 8, the biennial celebrates the talent of
artists born in the ‘60s and ‘70s.
“We made a conscious decision to focus on an emerging generation of
artists, as a lot of biennials do, in the tradition of highlighting young
and new work,” said Armstrong, also the acting director of the museum.
While past biennials featured artists from one area of California, be
it the Bay Area or Los Angeles, this year’s show scanned work from all
over the state.
“There are so many good artists in this state, and there’s no [other]
California biennial,” Armstrong said. “California artists often feel
underrecognized in the rest of the country. . . . Yet we all know it’s a
vital area where a lot of artists are choosing to live now.”
The pulse-taking reports that our artistic environment is heavily
influenced by youth culture, ethnic diversity, technology, Hollywood and
then the most mundane, inconspicuous things.
“It really gives you a more general sense of attitudes and energies
and sensibilities,” Armstrong said. “For me, it’s the combination that’s
really exciting.”
Through stills that land on the wall from a DVD projection, artist
Rebeca Bollinger makes art out of repeated images of a chain-link fence,
stop signs and parts of a parking lot.
Yoshua Okon’s “Cockfight,” a video installation (also with
photographs) involving one girl sticking her tongue out and another girl
pretending to puke, artfully shows two Mexican, uniformed schoolgirls
being improper and acting more like stereotypes of rude, offensive men.
Okon’s statement is about two separate classes of Mexican society and
how they collide.
Charlie White’s series “Understanding Joshua” stars a grotesque
creature named Joshua. Each photograph shows a seemingly normal -- almost
too normal -- scene of beautiful, sleek people interacting. Joshua
mingles with someone on the side or sometimes smack in the middle of two
people in bed.
“Gossip,” a particularly evocative photo by White, shows four blond
women having afternoon tea and animated conversations. But two of the
blonds have their hands stroking what could only be called gross,
skin-colored chunks of alien-body-part-resembling stuff. White intends
the blobs to represent hidden parts of people and their personalities
that make them human, according to a statement in the catalog.
Finally, there is the work by two artists -- Stephanie Syjuco and
Yoram Wolberge -- whose work will greet you before you even step into the
main exhibit hall.
Among Syjuco’s pieces in the collection are two fake security systems
that don’t do a thing. They look real -- with blinking red lights, angled
cameras, wires and everything -- but if you look closely, the cameras
often point at each other and the wires aren’t connected to anything
remotely electric.
One hangs above the entrance to the museum and one hangs above the
entrance to the biennial collection gallery.
“They have a direct effect on the viewer,” said museum spokesman Brian
Langston. “People act differently if they know they’re being watched.”
The artist is said to be describing a state she calls “neither here
nor there.”
Walk further into the museum and you’ll be greeted by Wolberger’s
blown-up miniatures, which are only some of his works.
“Toy Soldier” is a life-size version of a miniature toy soldier
magnified so intensely that you can even see the manufacturing defects on
and around his body. As if pulled from a mold containing hundreds of
other little soldiers, the piece is lined with a thin sheet of plastic
molding.
“Bride and Groom” shows a life-size version of a couple that would top
a wedding cake. They, too, are lined with sloppy plastic molding and with
smudgy eyes that make them, close up, almost scary.
“He exaggerates all the flaws,” Hofmann said of Wolberger’s work.
“Once it’s huge, it becomes really strange. He likes taking everyday
things and twisting them, turning them upside down and revealing the
everyday qualities in our lives and revealing the oddities of it.”
FYI
WHAT: 2002 California Biennial
WHEN: Sunday through Sept. 8. Museum hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday.
WHERE: Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
COST: $5 for adults, $4 for seniors and students, and free for members
and children younger than 16
CALL: (949) 759-1122
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