The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Books  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater
Newport-Folk-Fest-Banner

Philosophy students

Erwin Wurm and Sarah Walker investigate the universe at Brandeis
By GREG COOK  |  May 31, 2006

060526_inside_wurm_inspecti.jpg
INSPECTION, FROM “INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO BE POLITICALLY INCORRECT 2002/2003”: Wurm’s pieces act as mysterious metaphors for our desperate longing for sensual — and mental — connection.

Austrian artist Erwin Wurm loves playing the philosopher. When he flew into Boston from his home in Vienna a few Wednesdays ago to give a tour of his retrospective “I Love My Time, I Don’t Like My Time” at Brandeis’s Rose Art Museum, he wondered aloud to the audience, “When I stand quiet, is it a sculpture or is it an action?” He made pronouncements: “Gaining and losing weight is also a sculpture.” You find him testing out such theories in the more than 130 works in this show, which was organized by the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco and is his first major US survey.

Born in 1954, Wurm started out working cheap, using whatever materials he had handy. His earliest piece here, the 1992 video 59 Positions, shows him and a friend huddling inside sweaters that they stretch over their bodies in screwball ways, putting their legs into sleeves and so on, to adopt 59 different poses. Mixing clowning and seriousness, he studies the nature of sculpture by seeing how many ways he can vary his presentation of basic objects and by throwing performers into the mix.

He soon hit on his signature idea, the One Minute Sculpture, which began with videos in 1997 and spawned a body of large-format photographs. (It also inspired the video for the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ song “Can’t Stop” in 2002.) These are documents of brief goofy feats of derring-do choreographed by Wurm: a woman lying on the floor with the leg of a chair balanced on her eye; a man on all fours balanced atop coffee cups; a woman holding bottles between her arms and legs; a man balanced on a broom; a woman crushed under a suitcase; two legs of a chair balanced on carrots; a man with a film canisters stuck in his eye sockets, pens plugging his nose and ears, and a stapler in his mouth.

You are invited to have a gallery attendant snap a Polaroid of you improvising your own One Minute Sculpture on platforms Wurm has installed for this purpose. If you send him the photo with $100, he’ll even sign it to make it an official Erwin Wurm artwork. This is one of the oldest and most tired conceptual jokes in the book.

And that’s my problem with this show. Wurm riffs on questions artists have been asking for a century. What makes something art? Who decides? He represents a more knowingly absurd version of those fashion photographers who persuade their subjects to hop into the air or stand in a lake or lie in a tub full of milk. But his art hasn’t the wicked deconstructionist wit of something like Ben Vautier’s Total Art Matchbox from the mid 1960s, a carton of matches with text instructing you to “use these matches to destroy all art . . . and as I Ben signed everything work of art — burn — anything — keep last match for this matchbox.” Neither do his clothing pieces and stunts have the vulnerability and menace of Yoko Ono’s 1964 Cut Piece, in which she sat on a stage with a pair of scissors and invited audience members to snip off her clothes, piece by piece, till she was naked.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Massive attack, Time and space, My Baby Shot Me Down, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Science and Technology, Sciences, Astronomy,  More more >
| More
Add Comment
HTML Prohibited

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 07/31 ]   Boston Pie Experiment  @ Middle East Downstairs
[ 07/31 ]   "Cocktail Culture"  @ Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art
[ 07/31 ]   Craft Spells + Gardens & Villa + Dirty Dishes  @ Great Scott
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   EVA HESSE AT THE ICA AND TORY FAIR AT THE DECORDOVA  |  July 26, 2011
    Hesse's ability to imbue her art with body and blood and gravity anticipated the kinder, gentler minimalism of today's Anish Kapoor, Rachel Whiteread, and Roni Horn, as well as the fleshy fairy-tale figures of Kiki Smith. Boston sculptor Tory Fair has descended from Smith's family tree, with glossy resin or lumpy rubber casts of her own nude body uncannily sprouting vines and flowers.
  •   THE DECORDOVA THINKS ABOUT ''MURALS''  |  July 19, 2011
    In "Wall Works" at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, curatorial fellow Lexi Lee Sullivan attempts to corral a trend in art today that spans graffiti and interior decoration.
  •   REVIEW: TOM WOLFE AT THE NMAI AND TRENT BURLESON AT THE NAM  |  July 12, 2011
    Tom Wolfe is famous for authoring the nonfiction books The Right Stuff and The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test , as well as the novel The Bonfire of the Vanities . And for wearing white suits, sometimes with matching homburg hat and gloves.
  •   REVIEW: ''REMEMBER THE LADIES'' AT THE NEWPORT ART MUSEUM  |  July 07, 2011
    Rhode Island is one of the preeminent places for art-making in America, thanks in great part to the Rhode Island School of Design, but what would it be without its pioneering women?  
  •   THE MCC AWARDS AT TUFTS, 'FLOURISH' AT MASSART, AND 'THE CAVE PROJECT'  |  July 11, 2011
    On the whole, I wish many of these 13 grant winners were more exciting. The art often feels conservative or academic. Even when the craft is impressive, the artists often seem to have little they care about and little to say.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2011 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group