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| October
2004 |
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Vol.
23 No. 8 |
| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
New
York
Liz Craft
Marianne Boesky Gallery
by
Jonathan Goodman
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Liz
Craft, The Shopping Cart, 2003 Bronze, 75 1/2 x 67 x 56 in.
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For
sheer weirdness, not much could beat Liz Crafts show of figurative
sculptures, made mostly of cast bronze. Craft is a brilliant artisan of
the bizarre, someone whose idiosyncrasies seem tied to issues of California
funk and the morbid consequences of bad dreams. As an artist, she invitesindeed
she completesfantasies that make sense via a seemingly drugged hallucination,
in which the gothic implications of the forms spell out a kind of trouble
that, for all its would-be naiveté, is about as sophisticated as
art can get. Her little shop of horrors trades on commodities and witchcraft
and can seem to be deliberately over the top, but the sculpture is too
interesting and formally compelling for her audience to dismiss it as
mere eccentricity. Somewhere in her fields of broken dreams Craft proposes
an art of purpose, even resolve, in the face of junk and general uselessness.
So the
question facing us, as we regard Crafts willful monstrosities, is:
"Just how far will vulgarity take us?" Birdman (2003) is a jagged
example of the artists impertinence: a nearly five-foot-tall hand,
with legs, flips the bird with brutality rather than insouciance. The
extended middle finger relates an attitude whose provocative qualities
are both humorous and strange: Why such an aggressive image, especially
toward an audience more or less on the side of the artist? Some of the
provocations appear studied, in large part because they are so repetitive.
For example, the repulsiveness of a small bronze sculpture of shit (Poop
with Flies, 2003) is dulled by the fact that we expect to be outraged
on a regular basis by an artist whose willfulness precedes her like a
bad reputation. While it is enjoyable, even funny, on some level to be
confronted with the bold artifacts of an adolescent mind, we should remember
that humor is a very personal affair: what one person deems hilarious
may well be seen as offensive by another.
The problem, then, with Crafts work lies in its blatancy of manner:
it doesnt lead its audience so much as stun it with questions of
indiscretion. The sculptures turn on the banal, but with so much free
energy that it proves hard to disregard them; moreover, their scrappy
attack engages the audience in ways that less demanding, friendlier art
cannot achieve. More than anything else, the work has to do with defiance,
and Crafts populist flair cannot be deniedagain and again,
she makes images that refuse to be ignored, commenting archly, if also
somewhat conventionally, on the ridiculous aspects of American commercial
visual culture. Her small ensemble The Pony (2003) is an absurd vision
of the mythical unicorn, complete with a multi-colored horn on the end
of which a butterfly sits. Weaving its tail is a skeleton with a top hat,
surrounded by strange paraphernalia: an actors laughing mask, a
purple ribbon, an hourglass, an outsize pair of dice, and a rose. The
Pony is a memento mori piece, whose dance with death is intended to overwhelm
the dream-like aspect. The broad humor suggests a metaphysical slapstick,
a tableau whose macabre engagement with reality makes us laugh despite
the seeming seriousness.
Craft continues her voodoo mythology with Venice Witch (2002), a hag with
bulging eyes, puckered mouth, and claws for hands. Her hair and dress
are made of amber beads, and she wears a pair of roller skates that are
trailed by a chrome portable radio, which sits, like the skates, on a
chrome zigzag shape. Two more chrome zigzags complete the piece. Eyes
without a Face (2003), made of ceramic and tin, ceaselessly watched over
the entire show. Some 16 inches wide, the eyes bore blankly down on the
viewer with a Big Brother denial of dignitythey see everything but
recognize nothing. Part of Crafts humor depends on the fact that
it is scary in an oddly distanced way. Her imagination is three parts
California funk and one part horror tale. It is hard to take the situation
seriously: her witch is genuinely frightful, but in the anything-goes
atmosphere, the emphasis is on the comical as well.
Craft has made other icons of idiosyncrasy, including a small dragon sleeping
on its side and a naked hippie playing the guitar and smoking a pipe from
which smoke billows for several feet. The Shopping Cart (2003) is strangely,
defiantly beautiful: a large cactus, partially contained within a shopping
cart, leaps out at the viewer, with several spider webs adding drama and
weirdness to an otherwise natural tableau. The artisanal skill animating
these sculptures makes them remarkable and provides them with a real presence.
It is a powerful New York debut for this wayward spirit, whose rebelliousness
is oddly reassuring. Craft has found a language of her own to develop,
and she doesnt suffer from shyness or indecisiveness. Her various
sculptural tics reward both the quick glance and the extended gaze. There
was a lot to think about in this very good show.
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