realUNreal
The overall plan is that each project is presented, contextualised in a
space in which it gains a new significance and efficacy that can guarantee
its social, political and media impact. As Lucy Lippard has stated recently:
"Art itself possesses no type of social impact. It is its contextualisation
which gives it its power."
Artist's Choice: Mona Hatoum |
Mona Hatoum
realUNreal; Selections from 9 curators
realUNreal is an exhibition of nine curators asked to draw a line between the real and unreal
politics of the gallery; to negotiate the space between art and image, image and text, text and idea, idea and art.
It is an exhibition without artwork. It asks these curators, including writers, educators, and administrators, to present one original text, written specifically for the
exhibition, as context for one or more artwork.
These artworks are reproduced into the Sheppard Fine Arts Gallery as slide projections, distilled as an idealized space of image and text. A blend of two myths,
the one of Sisyphus and The Cave/Plato.
This idealized space derives a new significance and efficacy from its own re-contextualization of these curatorial experiments in the gallery, re-inventing their
social, political, and media impact.
As Lucy Lippard once wrote, "Art itself possesses no type of social impact. It is its contextualization which gives it power." "It must become the axe for the frozen
sea within us." (Franz Kafka)
This unreal exhibition explores the hybrid creation of artwork and its context as a third entity, bringing self-critique to this changed, alternate work of art as a
combination and co-opting of its originals.
--Shmulik Krampf Goodman
Art Week Review
"realUNreal at Sheppard Gallery, UNR"
Kirk Robertson, May 2003, Volume 34, Issue 4, Page 21-22
The gallery is dark. Only the back wall is lit and three stools lurk in
front of it like a trio of Duchampian readymades, minus the bicycle wheel.
Hung on the wall is a series of framed 8-1/2-by-11-inch texts. The only
other thing in the gallery is a slide projector on auto, projecting images
of twenty-two artists. Texts as artworks, objects as reproductions:
conceptualism lives large. Here, in a process of inversion, nine curators
have been cast into the role of artist, creating works out of ideas and
others¹ art. Their "texts" become both object and context within an
exhibition where "artworks" exist solely as reproductions in a slide show.
Curators usually work behind the scenes, managing people and practical
details as much as lofty ideas. The exhibition reveals that curatorial
agendas are often clouded or compromised by viewers¹ perception and the
politics of space: selection, exclusion, installation, contextualization.
Here, we are told, "each project is presented, contextualized in a space in
which it gains a new significance and efficacy that can guarantee it social,
political, and media impact." In the accompanying catalog,
organizer/curator Shmulik Krampf Goodman suggests that this cohabitation of
text/context and reproductions represents an "idealized" space, one that
blends Plato¹s cave and the myth of Sisyphus. There¹s something to this: we
perceive the world indirectly, seeing reality only via the framed texts and
the flickering slide images on the darkened walls. And, just when we think
we¹ve got a handle on the paradigm of the moment, it slips out of our hands
and rolls down to the bottom of the hill.
So what do the curators dream of contextualizing? Stephan Barbarino builds
a bridge between Ludwig¹s Neuschwanstein and the works of some
late-twentieth century artists. David Bonetti isolates four paintings by
four artists in four separate rooms. Arnold Kemp and Kevin Killian use
seven artists to forge an assemblage of forgotten fragments: eviction
notices, gallery announcements, grant deadlines and video surveillance.
Simon Lamunière ponders relationships between physical museums (in which we
set one piece next to another) and virtual space (in which we scroll a
list). Lawrence Rinder conjures objects through a series of memento
mori‹teenage memories, Emperor Hadrian and world flea markets‹that ask us to
consider what we adore. Ralph Rugoff suggests both that uncertainty is
necessary for discovery, and that a 800-HELP number would be helpful to
address issues of viewer irrelevance at exhibitions. Marcia Tanner sees
curating as an art form that makes connections visible, but also one whose
expectations of gratified desire always leave you wanting more. Yozo
Yamaguchi ponders the gap between museums and the "I," where and how private
motives become public collections.
After the 1970s when it asserted the primacy of idea over visual, conceptual
art has aged into part of the establishment. Concept now plays a major
structural role in contemporary works, but often must share the stage with
the formal. Similarly, successful curatorial initiative requires an
intellectual impetus requited by visual objects. This exhibition returns
conceptualism to her throne, placing the object and the visual secondary to
the ideas they manifest and those the curator finds interesting. And, like
any group show, this one is variable in its content and its ability to
engage.
Duchamp long ago suggested that the artist could re-think things, could
re-make meaning by re-contextualizing objects. Conceptual art and the
legions of didactic museum wall texts that followed attempted to teach us
how to read standing up, something I continue to resist. So perched on the
readymade, I scanned the texts, with the click-click of the projector
punctuating my thoughts. In this state of equilibrium, I realize that the
ability of texts or images to document experience will always be an
illusion.
realUNreal closed in March at the Sheppard Fine Arts Gallery, at the University of
Nevada, Reno.
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"The Color of Palo Alto" by Samuel Yates
Sheppard Fine Arts Gallery, University of Nevada, Reno*

Curator: Arnold J. Kemp with Kevin Killian / Curator of the Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA
Artists: Nayland Blake, Mark Dion, Anthony Discenza, Dan Estabrook, Jason
Fox, Matthew Higgs, ARNOLD J. KEMP (image)

"Guarded View" by Fred Wilson (1991)
mannequins, museum guard uniforms 75" x 48" x 166"
Sheppard Fine Arts Gallery, University of Nevada, Reno.
* Photo: Kathryn Dunlevie, digital photograph. Promotional Image No.4.
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