Trending Now…Some Assembly
Required
By Tom Wachunas
EXHIBIT: TrendFACTORY: Stark – Prints by Leslie
Mutchler, THROUGH OCTOBER 27, Main
Hall Art Gallery, Kent State University at Stark, 6000 Frank Avenue NW, North
Canton. Gallery hours are Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. / Sat. 10 a.m.-Noon
For more information contact Jack McWhorter at 330.244.3356 jmcwhort@kent.edu or Leslie Mutchler web site at http://www.lesliemutchler.com/TrendFACTORY2.html
Note to my students: If you decide to write
your paper on this exhibit, I suggest reviewing the chapter on Alternative
Media. Give special attention to Conceptual Art and Installation Art, which
will hopefully spark some connections.
Billing this as an
exhibit of prints by artist Leslie Mutchler, an assistant professor teaching 2D
and 3D Foundations at the University of Texas at Austin, is only a little deceptive
to the extent that it could set up an expectation of seeing a traditional display
of fine art prints. While there is an “edition” of images here, in the form of
triangular patterns printed on multiple cardboard sheets gathered into
wall-mounted racks, they’re actually a secondary focal point. Here, assuming
the posture of the casual, passive observer might prove unsatisfying if not
inappropriate. This installation is a hands-on collaborative experience – an assembly plant of sorts,
designed so that viewers become active makers.
After
following the artist’s general instructions (posted in very large text on a
wall and demonstrated in a video loop) for assembling her 2D prints into a 3D
form, paricipants then enter the digital world by photographing their
constructions and emailing the picture to the posted tumblr address. The last
step in the process is to disassemble the form and leave the remains on the
floor of the gallery for “recycling” (though for whom or for what purpose is
not made clear).
Mutchler’s printed
designs aren’t particularly remarkable art works per se so much as elements or
steps in a larger process. In this context, gallery visitors could regard them
as found objects to be appropriated for another purpose. From that perspective,
they bring to mind the seminal thinking of Marcel Duchamp and his “readymades”
(a term he coined to describe pre-existing, found objects).
The most notable of
those was Fountain (a porcelain
urinal he placed on a pedestal) from 1917, which wholly usurped historically
established ideas (a pre-existing system) about artistic originality. It was
essentially a declaration of the supremacy of the individual artist, not
history, in setting the parameters of art. What he set in motion nearly a century ago is
still very much a major component of postmodernist artistic concepts and
practices – a “trend” if ever there was one. In commenting on the significance
of Duchamp’s employment of appropriation, critic Hal Foster wrote in 1985, “…the artist becomes a manipulator of signs
more than a producer of art objects, and the viewer an active reader of
messages rather than a passive contemplator of the aesthetic or consumer of the
spectacle.”
I think Foster’s
assessment captures the overarching spirit of this installation. On one level, TrendFACTORY could be seen as a metaphor
for how we embrace given (or found) systems of manufacturing, delivery and
consumption of a product. Further, there is the suggestion/implication that the
making and dissemination of art is a social act.
Evidence of the
collaboration with Mutchler will ultimately exist not as a material object for
display in a brick-and-mortar gallery, but on line as a virtual symbol of
individualized decisions. Uploading a symbol of the maker’s activity in effect
imprints the internet with the maker’s presence, which is of course itself an
ongoing, ubiquitous trend these days. If you participate, you might consider
your virtual sculpture as a surrogate selfie.
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