Word: ica
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...unassuming and ambiguous approach when questioning the status of the art object, another favorite line of inquiry for '80s artists. Here, they follow in the tradition of Marcel Duchamp, and ally themselves with contemporaries, including Sherrie Levine and Alan McCollum, who address problems of mechanical reproduction and authorship. The ICA show includes several black, rubber and Beracryl castings of mundane objects like a candle or a doggy dish. Although these hand-made "readymades" may be overly indebted to Jasper John's light bulb or flashlight castings of the early 1960s, other pieces in the exhibition toy more originally with...
...Bent with the Eyes" (1970) is just one of the many pieces in the ICA's thoughtfully installed show which explicitly explore the viewer's relationship to the work of art by confounding normal perception. One of Brazil's most important contemporary artists, Meireles is often associated with Conceptual Art, which engages the viewer with an idea rather than an actual art object. Meireles, like the most famous Conceptual artists, including Joseph Kosuth and Lawrence Weiner, gained critical acclaim in the 1970s. Through the medium of language, Kosuth and Weiner examine such issues as the commodification of the art object...
...ICA's well-produced orientation video, Meireles likens the place of a Latin-American contemporary artist to the spectator at the back of a movie theater, watching the film and the audience reacting in front of him. So while he and other Latin-American artists like Lygia Clark and Helio Oiticica may have had their eyes on the art world, few could see them in the back row. Yet as his retrospective proves, he has consistently engaged, and sometimes foreseen, the same theoretical issues and artistic strategies of his better-known international counterparts. His installations of room corners, whose walls...
...preoccupation with color surfaces in the paintings of Tabboo!, who achieves through painting what the rest of the Boston School do through photography. It is unfortunate that the work represented in the exhibition is not Tabboo!'s best, but the pieces at the ICA give the viewer an idea of some of his concerns gay art and the drag subculture. For example, the flamboyant gesture of "Pink," which is a picture of the word "pink" painted in different shades of pink, plays on the association of pink with gay culture...
...Boston School," which is running at the ICA until December 31, is the first time all of these artists have come together for an exhibition. It is a chance to see their oeuvre as a group and proves much more rewarding than if they were seen on their own. Their individual accomplishments, though distinguished, become even more powerful as we see how they have played off each other...