Game show

Who will win the ICA's Foster Prize?
By GREG COOK  |  November 18, 2008

FOSTER_TOP_Defiant.jpg
DEFIANT: Rania Matar's photos show women and children living amid the rubble of war in her
native Lebanon.

“The 2008 Foster Prize” | “Momentum 12: Gerard Byrne” | “Ugo Rondinone: Clockwork for Oracles” | Institute Of Contemporary Art, 100 Northern Ave, Boston | “Foster” + “Byrne” |Through March 1 | “Rondinone” Through November 1
On November 12, the Institute of Contemporary Art opened its biennial Foster Prize exhibit of "Boston-area artists of exceptional promise." The game show works like this: four finalists present their work in the museum and we wait till early 2009 for the institution to announce the $25,000 winner. (The three others get $1500 consolation prizes.) So for those of you playing along at home, let's meet the contestants.

Catherine (Kanarinka) D'Ignazio of Waltham, best known locally as a founding member of the Institute for Infinitely Small Things and other local art gangs, goes solo here with recent work addressing the climate of fear drummed up by our leaders since 9/11. Last year she jogged most of Boston's disaster evacuation routes (you've probably seen the signs) while recording her breathing. Those recordings are broadcast here along with a new video installation, Exit Strategy. In a loop of quick cuts, D'Ignazio exits through doors (slam, slam, slam) all over the ICA building but never escapes. The slamming and the insidious breathing induce extreme, punishing claustrophobia. It's very effective, and terribly unpleasant.

Rania Matar of Brookline presents black-and-white photos of women and children living amid the rubble of war in her native Lebanon. A hole that a rocket blasted through a bullet-pocked wall frames an ornate building behind. A stout Orthodox Christian nun's veil ripples in the wind. A girl hugs the concrete-block corner of a bare room in a Palestinian refugee camp. A family hang out in the debris where their apartment used to be. Running through the images is a meditation on Muslim and Christian women adopting the veil.

This is the fifth exhibit I've seen of this work. In the past I've felt that Matar would make a good newspaper photojournalist but that her work needed more urgency or vision. This grouping is more vivid, more dramatically composed — even though it includes familiar shots. I think that's because the images have been more sharply selected.

Joe Zane of Cambridge makes dry, cerebral, art-referential, self-depreciating joke paintings and sculptures about the nature of art and museums and what it means to be a great artist. He's explored these themes in past work; he addresses them in the context of the Foster competition with pieces like a silver-plated trophy whose shape is based on his profile.

Zane questions artistic originality, the nature of representation, and the artist's ego with a pair of seemingly identical paintings of himself — which he commissioned from a factory in China. The Triumph of Parrhasius, a third painting from that factory, seems to be another copy of the portrait partly hidden behind a trompe-l'oeil veil. The title refers to the ancient Greek painter Parrhasius, who is said to have competed with Zeuxis to determine who was the greater artist. Zeuxis painted grapes so lifelike that birds flew down to eat them. Then Zeuxis asked Parrhasius to unveil his painting, only to learn that the curtain was part of the painting. Snap!

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Can you love Boston art and still love the Foster Prize?, Review: Rubberbandance at the ICA, The museum-building boom continues, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Painting, Visual Arts, Institute of Contemporary Art,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN  |  May 13, 2013
    What does it mean to be a man? That's the question at the heart of this smart, sumptuous exhibit — one of the best shows in the region this year.
  •   MERRY PRANKSTERS  |  May 07, 2013
    Parked out front of Brown University's gray modernist Granoff Center on a recent sunny morning were one of those 15-foot-tall inflatable rats that unions install in front of businesses they're protesting and a limousine sloppily painted to resemble a yellow and black school bus.
  •   ALTERED IMAGES  |  April 30, 2013
    Among the handsome Washington Street storefronts of AS220's renovated Mercantile Block building, with their neo-old-timey signs, is the residents' entrance to the building. It is against AS220's religion to leave any space empty that can be filled with art. So the lobby is the AS220 Resident Gallery, which occupants of the building take turns filling with their stuff.
  •   IN THE CITY  |  April 23, 2013
    One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Providence art scene is how the city itself has been such a rich subject. A decade ago, the city became a galvanizing topic as artists fought to protect the old mills that served as their homes and studios from demolition — with mixed success. But lately, the community's industrial architecture itself has attracted artists' attention.
  •   THE AFTERMATH OF ATROCITY  |  April 16, 2013
    From the ruins of the Iraq war emerges Wafaa Bilal's "The Ashes Series" and Daniel Heyman's "I Am Sorry It Is So Difficult To Start," on view at Brown University's Bell Gallery.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK