Urs Fischer is a conceptual artist that likes to go big! He once removed the entire floor of an important New York gallery, all the pipes and conduit and veins and arteries that lie beneath the marble and dug a big hole of dirt. Inside a gallery. A. Big. Hole. Of. Dirt. Big sculptures, big paintings, big thoughts. Or maybe lots of little thoughts. And then make them big, like when he made teeny tiny sculptures and made giant photographs of them. Like this (taken from Garage Magazine).
NW: What is the problem in the Problem Paintings?
UF: It’s just funny. It’s just a name. Any problem functions because it occupies the center of your existence, no? It obstructs.
NW: And what’s the “painting” side? There isn’t much paint either, in the traditional way.
UF: But who cares about the traditional way? Problems are omnipresent in everyone’s life; they are everything from the best motor to do something to the biggest obstructer. Problems are amazing.
"Problems are amazing." Right on. One of the things I like to say is, "Everybody's got problems. I got problems. And my problems are good problems to have."
Together with the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Urs Fischer has invited the people of this city to sculpt clay in whatever way they want. The sculptures will be displayed beginning April 21st at MOCA. The clay sculptures will not be fired in anyway. They will dry and flake and crack and break and decay.
In addition to playing in as much clay as we wanted, it was such an experience to be a tourist in this grey land of fantasy, realism, humor, tragedy and grace. Like stepping into a 3-D black and white photo.
A horse using a rotary phone.
A giant (myopic?) rat with mice crawling all over it and a tummy chamber full of cheese.
A frog with teeth and a drinking problem.
And speaking of drinking problems. I'm wondering if the artist was sitting there going, "Man, all the good ideas are taken! All that's left is a water fountain!" That thing makes me laugh everytime I think about it.
And this one is social commentary on violence among carbohydrates? Bagels vs. Doughnuts?
Who's the alien in this clay world? He or I?
I like to think this one is called, "Okay, Ishmael, now what?"
Clay, clay, clay everywhere! This disembodied hand grasping from an alternate clay universe into ours.
Clay mop. Clay bucket.
Oh, yes, I made something too. A strange trio:
A cyclops rabbit, with one tentacle and a dragon tail.
A ghoulish owl with tree trunk horns.
And a fairy frog with butterfly wings.
This is cool.
And here's a head that is already falling apart, finding that beauty in the breakdown.
This is "LOVE". Can you still recognize the love while it breaks down? Ever been there? Done that?
And this: This is an enclosed, round igloo-like wall, probably eight feet in diameter ...
... with a tiny little man on a tiny little couch with a tiny little beer and a tiny little expression on his face inside.
This is cool.
And here's a head that is already falling apart, finding that beauty in the breakdown.
This is "LOVE". Can you still recognize the love while it breaks down? Ever been there? Done that?
And this: This is an enclosed, round igloo-like wall, probably eight feet in diameter ...
And the son, yea, he made a wave with a shaka hand. 'Cause he's Jack, brah. He didn't complain and I think he even liked being there. But that's just between us.
2 comments:
totally awesome!
i would have loved to be part of this huge clay "matscherei", too!
XO!
nic
What fun! (I thought the "alien" was a scuba diver checking out the coral in front of him/her...)
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